BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    Ó



                                                                  AB 704
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          Date of Hearing:   April 16, 2013

                       ASSEMBLY COMMITTEE ON VETERANS AFFAIRS
                                Al Muratsuchi, Chair
               AB 704 (Blumenfield) - As Introduced:  February 21, 2013
           
          SUBJECT  : Emergency medical services: military experience.

          SUMMARY  : Requires the Emergency Medical Services Authority  
          (EMSA) to adopt regulations by January 1, 2015 to accept the  
          military education, training, and practical experience of  
          applicants, as specified, towards certification as an Emergency  
          Medical Technician (EMT)-I and EMT-II, and towards licensure as  
          an EMT-Paramedic (EMT-P).  Specifically,  this bill  :  

          1)Requires the EMSA to develop and adopt regulations by January  
            1, 2015, to accept, upon presentation of satisfactory  
            evidence, the military education, training, and experience for  
            applicants as a member of the United States (U.S.) Armed  
            Forces, the U.S. Military Reserve, the National Guard of any  
            state, or the Naval Militia of any state, towards meeting  
            requirements for the EMT-I certificate, the EMT-II  
            certificate, and the EMT-P license. 

          2)Requires the EMSA, in developing the regulations, to deem an  
            applicant for EMT-II certification with military experience  
            equivalent to EMT-I certification requirements as  
            EMT-I-certified, unless the EMSA determines that the military  
            education, training, or practical experience is not  
            sufficiently comparable to existing standards. 

          3)Prohibits the EMSA, in developing the regulations, from  
            requiring an applicant for EMT-P licensure with military  
            experience equivalent to relevant coursework to complete  
            duplicative requirements, unless the EMSA determines that the  
            military education, training, or practical experience is not  
            sufficiently comparable to existing standards.  

           EXISTING LAW  : 

          1)Requires the EMSA to develop and adopt regulations and minimum  
            standards for the training and scope of practice of an EMT-I,  
            EMT-II, and EMT-P. (Health and Safety Code [HSC] Sections  
            1797.170, 1797.171, 1797.172) 









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          2)Authorizes an individual applying for EMT certification to  
            challenge EMT course completion requirements if the individual  
            provides evidence that the following occurred in the preceding  
            two years: 

             a)   Completed an emergency medical service training program  
               of the U.S. Armed Forces which meets the specified United  
               States Department of Transportation EMT-Basic National  
               Standards Curriculum; or,

             b)   Was active in a pre-hospital emergency medical  
               classification of the U.S. Armed Services which does not  
               have formal certification requirements. (CCR 100078)
             
          3)Creates the following definitions:

             a)   "Emergency Medical Technician-I" or "EMT-I" to mean an  
               individual trained in all facets of basic life support  
               according to prescribed standards. (HSC 1797.80 and CCR  
               100063). 

             b)   "Emergency Medical Technician-II," "EMT-II," "Advanced  
               Emergency Medical Technician," or "Advanced EMT" means an  
               EMT-I with additional training in limited advanced life  
               support according to prescribed standards. (HSC 1797.82 and  
               CCR 100063)

             c)   "Emergency Medical Technician Paramedic," "EMT P,"  
               "paramedic" or "mobile intensive care paramedic" means an  
               individual whose scope of practice to provide advanced life  
               support is according to prescribed standards. (HSC 1797.84  
               and CCR, Title 22, Division 9, Chapter 4, Section 100145) 

           FISCAL EFFECT  : Unknown at this time.

           COMMENTS  : 

          According to the author:

               Upon exiting military service, our nation's recent veterans  
               face a higher unemployment rate than their civilian  
               counterparts. Many veterans are unable to transfer their  
               military training and experience into marketable job skills  
               for civilian careers.  This should not be a problem for  
               veterans who served as medics given the high-quality  








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               education and experience they obtained in the military.  
               Unfortunately, California does not offer credit for this  
               specialized background towards civilian licensure.  

               Veterans with medical training make up the second largest  
               specialty in the military and cannot transfer their  
               training and experience towards EMT [certification] or  
               paramedic licensure, despite similarities in the training  
               and experience of comparable positions, such as a combat  
               medic. As a result, these veterans must retake courses  
               which they have already taken, costing them additional time  
               and money.  

               AB 704 will allow these veterans to use their training and  
               experiences to be credited towards paramedic licensure, and  
               streamline veterans with equivalent experience to fill  
               much-needed jobs in the healthcare field.

          According to the Business and Professions Committee:

              1)   EMT Certification and Paramedic Licensure  . There are  
               currently 60,000 EMTs and 19,000 paramedics in California.  
               The EMS system and EMTs are the "first responders", usually  
               activated by a 911 call, who stabilize and transport  
               individuals to a medical facility for treatment.   

               This bill applies to two types of EMT certifications (EMT-I  
               and EMT-II) and one type of paramedic license (commonly  
               referred to as EMT-P). There are some notable differences  
               between the certifications and the license: 

                  a)        In California, EMT-I and EMT-IIs are certified  
                    by one of the 32 local (single- or multi-county) EMS  
                    agencies.  The local EMS agency reviews an applicant's  
                    documentation, including his or her course completion  
                    record, out-of-state certification, and National  
                    Registry card, to determine whether or not he or she  
                    meets state and local requirements.  Local EMS  
                    agencies have broad discretion in accepting or denying  
                    an EMT applicant, and in determining whether or not it  
                    will accept military experience towards certification.  
                      

                  b)        EMT-Ps (or paramedic licenses), are issued by  
                    the EMSA and then accredited by a local EMS agency to  








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                    work in a county once the paramedic is sponsored by a  
                    local advanced life support provider/employer. 
                
             2)   Acceptance of military experience towards EMT  
               certification  . Currently, there are two pathways for  
               veterans to count military experience towards EMT  
               certification:  
                   
                 a)     National Registry of EMTs  .  The National Registry of  
                 EMTs is a nationwide certification agency with uniform  
                 standards for training and examination of personnel  
                 delivering emergency ambulance services.  An individual  
                 must complete an approved U.S. Department of  
                 Transportation (U.S. DOT) training program, be  
                 cardiopulmonary resuscitation (CPR)-certified, and pass a  
                 practical and skills examination in order to receive a  
                 National Registry card. 

                 The National Registry of EMTs provides certification in  
                 four EMT classifications: Basic, Intermediate-85,  
                 Intermediate-99, and Paramedic.  California offers EMT  
                 certification by endorsement to out-of-state applicants  
                 holding a National Registry card and seeking  
                 certification in the state.   This provision would  
                 therefore apply to military members who hold a National  
                 Registry card.  Currently, the U.S. Army is the only  
                 branch of the U.S. Armed Forces that requires all of its  
                 military medics to obtain a National Registry card.  
                 According to the EOP report, "?medics in the Army are  
                 required to pass the EMT national certification at the  
                 conclusion of their technical training in the health  
                 sciences and maintain the certification while they remain  
                 in that military occupational specialty.  Air Force  
                 medics may take the exam but are not required to pass  
                 it."   
            
                b)     Waiver from training requirements  .  Existing state  
                 regulations allow a military veteran applying for EMT  
                 certification within two years of leaving military  
                 service to seek a waiver from training requirements.  A  
                 local EMS agency would review the applicant's military  
                 transcripts to determine whether the military coursework  
                 is equivalent to the accepted standard of the U.S. DOT  
                 training course.  If the local EMS agency determines that  
                 the military experience is equivalent, the applicant is  








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                 exempt from taking an approved U.S. DOT training course.  

                  Unless an individual holds a current National Registry  
                 EMT-Basic card, the applicant must take a written and  
                 skills examination and possible additional training  
                 specified by the local EMS agency.  Therefore, a military  
                 veteran from any branch of the U.S. Armed Forces other  
                 than the Army may still need to complete additional  
                 training and examination requirements as determined by  
                 the local EMS agency.  

                 Currently, there are no laws or regulations requiring  
                 EMSA to accept military education, training, or  
                 experience for the paramedic license. 

          This bill will take the existing consideration of military  
          experience for the EMT certification to the next level by  
          requiring regulatory development for those servicemembers not in  
          the U.S. Army. Those members do not receive the National  
          Registry card but their training is still worthy at least of  
          consideration toward certification and credit if found to be  
          appropriate by EMSA.

          For paramedics, again it makes sense that EMSA should at least  
          consider and credit, as appropriate, the military training and  
          experience of paramedic license applicants. EMSA currently has a  
          system in place for consideration of paramedic applications from  
          out of state and out of country applicants. It seems reasonable  
          that the same or a similar system could accommodate military  
          trained applicants. 

           REGISTERED SUPPORT / OPPOSITION  :   

           Support 
           
          Association of California Healthcare Districts
          California Association of County Veterans Service Officers 
          California Professional Firefighters
          California State Firefighters' Association, Inc.
          Vietnam Veterans of America, California State Council 

          Opposition 
           
          None at this time.
           








                                                                 AB 704
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          Analysis Prepared by  :    John Spangler/ V. A. / (916) 319-3550