Monteregie will keep four ambulances it was set to lose
The Monteregie ambulance service will be able to keep the four ambulances it was about to lose.
South Shore ambulance service, the Coopérative des techniciens ambulanciers de la Montérégie (CETAM), said Monday that due to a lack of funding from the provincial government, four ambulances serving the region would have to cease operations, representing 14 full-time positions.
CETAM said it is not up to them but the regional health board to decide on the number of ambulances a territory needs.
In 2019, CETAM called for up to seven additional ambulances to adequately serve the territory.
Two years later, the CISSS de la Montérégie-Centre and Montérégie-Ouest authorized the addition of three ambulances from their budgets. In 2022, the CISSS de la Montérégie-Centre added one more ambulance, again from its budget, bringing the total number of new vehicles to four.
This year, CISSS indicated that it is no longer able to fund these four ambulances.
The Tuesday, the regional health board reversed course, saying the ambulances will stay.
"If we didn’t have those ambulances, those calls would be given to other paramedic teams that are already overloaded with calls. It’s just unimaginable to have thought that not having those ambulances would be a good idea at this point. They were clearly needed," said Patrick Jasmin of CETAM.
The ambulances, covering Vaudreuil-Dorion, Salaberry-de-Valleyfield, Châteauguay and Saint-Bruno-de-Montarville, represent 16,000 hours of service per year.
- With files from The Canadian Press
CTVNews.ca Top Stories
Father, 2 children missing from northern B.C may be travelling to Alberta: RCMP
Mounties in B.C. are asking the public for help locating a father and his two children who have not been seen since Friday.
Spirit Airlines files for bankruptcy as financial losses pile up and debt payments loom
Spirit Airlines said Monday that it has filed for bankruptcy protection and will attempt to reboot as it struggles to recover from the pandemic-caused swoon in travel and a failed attempt to sell the airline to JetBlue.
Ottawa family heartbroken after being scammed over $22K on fake Taylor Swift tickets
A few weeks ago, they learned the tickets they booked last August were never real.
Moscow warns U.S. over allowing Ukraine to hit Russian soil with long-range weapons
U.S. President Joe Biden's decision to let Ukraine strike targets inside Russia with U.S.-supplied long-range missiles was met with ominous warnings from Moscow, a hint of menace from Kyiv and nods of approval from some Western allies.
Trudeau says he could have acted faster on immigration changes, blames 'bad actors'
Prime Minister Justin Trudeau says the federal government could have acted faster on reining in immigration programs, after blaming 'bad actors' for gaming the system.
Two men accused in fatal border crossing to stand trial in Minnesota
Two men are to stand trial on human smuggling charges this week, almost three years after a family from India was found frozen to death on the border between Manitoba and Minnesota.
Arbuckle throws for two touchdowns to lead Argos past Bombers 41-24 in Grey Cup
Nick Arbuckle threw two touchdown passes to lead the Toronto Argonauts to a 41-24 victory over the Winnipeg Blue Bombers in the Grey Cup on Sunday. Toronto captured its 19th Grey Cup, the most in CFL history.
Opposing plans to end Ukraine-Russia war could clash at G20 summit
Support for Ukraine will be tested at the G20 summit as nations clash over whether they should continue offering military support for Kyiv or impose a truce on a conflict which began with Russia's invasion nearly three years ago.
Parliament remains gridlocked amid Trump trade talk and postal strike
Parliament closes in on its eighth week of gridlock over a privilege motion, as Canada Post employees are on strike and calls emerge to exclude Mexico from upcoming trade talks.