My WebLink
|
Help
|
About
|
Sign Out
Home
Browse
Search
BC 1998 09 21
CabarrusCountyDocuments
>
Public Meetings
>
Meeting Minutes
>
BOC
>
1998
>
BC 1998 09 21
Metadata
Thumbnails
Annotations
Entry Properties
Last modified
4/30/2002 3:43:26 PM
Creation date
11/27/2017 1:07:26 PM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Meeting Minutes
Doc Type
Minutes
Meeting Minutes - Date
9/21/1998
Board
Board of Commissioners
There are no annotations on this page.
Document management portal powered by Laserfiche WebLink 9 © 1998-2015
Laserfiche.
All rights reserved.
/
25
PDF
Print
Pages to print
Enter page numbers and/or page ranges separated by commas. For example, 1,3,5-12.
After downloading, print the document using a PDF reader (e.g. Adobe Reader).
View images
View plain text
47 <br /> <br />ATTEST: <br /> <br />BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS <br />OF ROWAN COUNTY <br />By: <br /> <br />J. Newton Cohen, Chairperson <br /> <br />Kelly Dickinson, Clerk to the Board <br /> <br />Adoption of 0rd%D~Dce Amending Chapter 26, Article III, Fir~ Responder <br />Program, of ~h~ ¢0de of Ordinances <br /> <br /> UPON MOTION of Commissioner Barnhart, seconded by Commissioner Niblock <br />and unanimously carried, the Board adopted the following Ordinance. <br /> <br />Ordinance No. 1998-14 <br /> <br />BE IT ORDAINED that the following portions of Sections 26-51 through 26-68, <br />Part II of the Code of Ordinances, Cabarrus County, North Carolina, Chapter <br />26 Emergency Services, Article III First Responder Program, are hereby <br />amended to read as follows: <br /> <br />ARTICLE III. FIRST RESPONDER PROGRAM <br /> <br />Sec. 26-51. Purpose of article. <br />The county emergency medical service has transport vehicles certified by the <br />state office of emergency medical services (OEMS), which are manned by <br />personnel trained and certified as Paramedics (EMT-P). The service has (6) <br />stations which serve Cabarrus County. The main station, Station 1, is located <br />in the northwest part of Concord. Station 2 is located on Highway 49 across <br />from Central Cabarrus High School. Station 3 is located on Jackson Street in <br />Mount Pleasant and provides coverage for the northeast section of the county. <br />Station 4 presently operates out of Fieldcrest-Cannon's Fire Station on North <br />Loop Road and serves the northern part of Kannapolis and the northwest <br />section of the County. Station 7 is staffed at Concord Fire Station Five on <br />Pitts School Road and covers the western part of the County. Station 8 is <br />staffed at Midland Volunteer Station on Highway 601, South and covers the <br />southern-most part of the County. Presently our average response time is <br />less than five (5) minutes. The primary goal of an emergency medical service <br />system is to reduce the probability of death of a victim by providing <br />trained, well-equipped personnel at the scene of an accident or illness in a <br />prompt, efficient, and coordinated manner. Research studies indicate that 50 <br />percent of those who die from traumatic injuries die outside the hospital <br />emergency department. Seventy percent of our nation's traffic fatalities <br />occur in rural areas; however, rural areas represent only 40 percent of the <br />nation's population. The ACT Foundation (advanced coronary treatment) <br />reported that the chances for recovery of a victim in ventricular <br />fibrillation (a form of cardiac arrest) is 25 out of 100 when the medical <br />response time is within five minutes. The rate drops to 1 out of 100 when the <br />medical response time is ten minutes. A victim of cardiac arrest may die in 4 <br /> 6 minutes. It is not economically feasible to operate and maintain an <br />ambulance service in every town and junction in the county. However, it is <br />most desirable to have medically trained personnel located in close proximity <br />to the citizens so that life sustaining measures may be given in the first <br />few minutes after the occurrence of an accident or illness. A first responder <br />program is a logical and economically feasible way to ensure that prehospital <br />care is available to the rural citizens in the first minutes when life or <br />death may be decided. <br /> <br />Sec. 26-52. Requirements for certification of a first responder agency or an <br />individual first responder. <br /> <br />(a) No agency or department shall furnish, operate, conduct, maintain, <br />advertise, be engaged in or profess to be engaged in service as a first <br />responder agency unless that agency holds a currently valid certificate to <br />operate as a first responder issued by the county department of emergency <br />medical services and approved by the county board of commissioners or its <br />designated representative. <br />(b) No person shall operate, conduct, maintain, advertise, be engaged in or <br />profess to be engaged in business or service of a first responder unless that <br />person is affiliated with a certified first responder agency and holds a <br />currently valid medical responder certification issued through the state <br />office of emergency medical services. <br /> <br />Sec. 26-53. Application and granting process for certification as a first <br />responder or an individual first responder. <br /> <br /> (a) Application for a certificate to operate as a first responder agency in <br />the county by an applicant agency shall be filed with the county department of <br />emergency medical services. This application shall be made upon such forms as <br /> <br /> <br />
The URL can be used to link to this page
Your browser does not support the video tag.