County Fire’s training preps adults for EMS work

By Yvette Urrea Moe COUNTY OF SAN DIEGO COMMUNICATIONS OFFICE

Seventeen young adults earned their graduation certifi­cate from County Fire’s Emer­gency Medical Services (EMS) Corps program, completing more than 400 hours of train­ing designed to launch them into careers in the medical field.

The 20-week program blends classroom learning with hands on fieldwork and mentorship. Each participant works directly with an EMS professional and logs 120 hours of on-the-job ex­perience with them.

Kaiya Anderson Rodriguez, a graduate of the pro­gram’s first cohort, de­livered the keynote ad­dress. She shared how the program helped se­cure a job as an Emergency Medical Tech­nician with a local ambulance company.

The program serves people ages 18 to 26 who may face bar­riers in entering the EMS field. After passing an EMS Office background check, participants earn 12 college credits, receive a $1,500 monthly stipend, and can access support services such as financial literacy coaching, housing help, transportation assistance, and childcare re­sources.

A third cohort is now under­way at Palomar College, and ap­plications are open for a fourth cohort, which begins in July at Southwestern College’s Otay Mesa campus.

The program is funded by the state’s Employment Devel­opment and Public Works Alli­ance, which is expanding EMS Corps statewide to help meet workforce needs in emergency services.

Reprinted courtesy San Diego County Office of Communications.

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