Crime & Safety

Wisconsin Ambulance Safety Inspection Program Comes Under Scrutiny

While Wauwatosa Fire Department officials say they have no problems with how ambulances are inspected, others raise concerns that some ambulances in Wisconsin just shouldn't be on the road.

Ten years ago, the lives of an ambulance crew in central Wisconsin were changed forever when a balding tire caused their vehicle to lose traction on a wet highway, skid across the median and roll over.

In the resulting accident, the patient being transported died and the crew was injured, none more so than Matt Deicher of Mosinee.

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“I flew and hit my face onto the back doors of the ambulance,” Deicher told WISN 12 News.

Deicher was paralyzed. He believes the July 2003 accident could have been prevented "very, very easily."

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Just two days earlier, the lone state ambulance inspector gave the Mosinee Fire Department 10 days to replace balding tires on the vehicle. The crew was unaware of the report before the run.

A decade later, not much has changed in the state’s ambulance inspection program. There is still one inspector who travels the entire state, and each ambulance in Wisconsin — those owned by municipal fire departments and those run by private companies — is inspected every other year.

From WISN 12 News: Paralyzed EMT Says Nothing Has Changed

Patch and our media partners at WISN 12 News investigated the state program, reviewing dozens of ambulance inspection reports for 2011 and 2012 for area fire departments. While some concerns were raised about the state inspection program, for the most part, the review found no problems with the vehicles.

In Wauwatosa, for example, the Fire Department's ambulances were inspected in 2012 and no violations were found. And city fire officials said they did not have any concerns with the way Wisconsin inspects its ambulances.

Others See Need For Improvement

But the state ambulance inspection program has come under fire from some, who believe that more should be done to ensure they are safe for both patients and the personnel who transport them.

Those who criticize the current inspection program, overseen by the Wisconsin State Patrol, say the state needs more than one inspector and the vehicles should be inspected more than every other year. While most area fire officials are satisfied with the job the state was doing, others who responded to a Patch survey said the inspections are not as comprehensive as they should be.

Interactive: Compare Wauwatosa's ambulance fleets to nearby cities

“There should be a more thorough inspection of the body, chassis and powertrain,” Jeffrey Henningfeld, battalion chief for the Caledonia Fire Department, told Patch. “All mechanicals should be subject to a thorough evaluation against measurable standards.”

When asked if the state inspection program was sufficient, Menomonee Falls Fire Chief Jeffrey S. Hevey said: “No.”

“They need more inspectors who not only understand the emergency medical equipment, but they understand the vehicle chassis (brakes, suspension, shocks, tires and electrical),” Hevey said.

Dee Evans, who is the EMS director in the city of Berlin near Oshkosh and was the state inspector from 2001 to 2003, said the state job is “taxing” and just too much for one person.

Evans told Patch that rather than having a single statewide inspector, Wisconsin should use the five geographic districts that are now within the State Patrol, and have three or four part-time inspectors per region.

“Then you’re saving the state on the cost of hotels and lodging,” said Evans. “In the urban districts you may have more people, in the rural districts you would have less.”

Evans also believes inspections should take place annually, which could happen with a more regionalized approach, he said.

State Inspector Says System ‘Working Rather Well’

Paul Schilling is the state’s lone inspector. Every other year, he performs a half-day, 160-point inspection on every ambulance service provider’s fleet. He puts in serious travel time across the Badger State, and checks both the mechanical and medical equipment on each vehicle.

He told WISN 12 News’ Kent Wainscott that the inspection program is working, and that people shouldn’t be worried that the same guy who kicks the tires is also the one who checks the defibrillators.

“I don't think it should be a concern. I've been doing it for seven years and the process has been great,” Schilling said. “It’s been working rather well.”

Wauwatosa Officials Weigh In

Several chiefs talked about how the responsibility for safety lies with the local departments, not the state.

"The state inspector's out of our control," Oak Creek Fire Chief Tom Rosandich said. "We have enough internal checks and balances that keep an eye on ... inventory, maintenance, and the training that goes with the paramedic. I think the ambulance state inspector is just one added feature that we haven't had too much concern about."

Wauwatosa Assistant Fire Chief Jim Case said he also felt the state's program was sufficient.

The city has three ambulances in its fleet that average 103,470 in mileage, but the department plans to replace two of those ambulances this year, Case said.

Like every municipality, Tosa has a tight budget that limits how much it can spend on ambulance upkeep. But Case said the city has a good system in place for larger, "capital" purchases like those. 

"Obviously, if the budget wasn't an issue, we'd rather purchase new ambulances every few years," Case said. "But we try to find that balance."

Wauwatosa also has a new agreement in place with the North Shore Fire Department that has improved operations, Case said. A Tosa battalion chief oversees the maintenance of both fleets, and the departments share a reserve fire engine that Wauwatosa can use if it has a truck out of service.

Is Age, Mileage an Issue?

Patch surveyed 12 fire departments in the metro Milwaukee area and found that seven of them are operating ambulances that have more than 80,000 miles on them. Three departments — Wauwatosa, Brookfield and Greenfield — have ambulances in their fleet with more than 100,000 miles on them. And at least five of the departments are still running ambulances manufactured the 1990s.

The lifespan for a typical ambulance is three to five years in the “frontline,” and another two to three years in reserve, said Chad Brown, vice president of sales and marketing at Braun Industries, a leading manufacturer of ambulances. For Braun ambulances, the lifespan is double that, he added, assuming the vehicles have been properly configured for the department using them.

But, Brown said, mileage doesn’t paint a true picture of the wear and tear on an ambulance because ambulances have a lot of “hard braking” and “high idling,” which takes a toll on the engine.

“You have to look at engine hours with cumulative miles to get a truer picture of the wear and tear, and lifespan of an ambulance,” Brown said.

Patch editors Heather Asiyanbi and Lyssa Beyer contributed to this report.


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