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East Deer Township joins Lower Valley Ambulance Service

Haley Daugherty
| Friday, November 21, 2025 2:40 p.m.
Haley Daugherty | TribLive
A new Lower Valley Ambulance Service station will find a home in the former medical care office along Freeport Road in East Deer.

The future of EMS services in East Deer Township is no longer up in the air after commissioners settled on an agreement to join Lower Valley Ambulance Service.

According to Commissioner Chair Tony Taliani, East Deer was considering two options for EMS services. The other option was the proposed paid EMS authority that would merge Eureka EMS in Tarentum and Citizens Hose EMS in Harrison.

“We opted to go with Lower Valley EMS. It offered more savings for our residents,” Taliani said.

The proposed Eureka and Citizens Hose authority would call for a fee of at least $85, Taliani said. Details of that proposed multi-municipal EMS authority will be shared during a public meeting at Highlands High School on Dec. 4.

Taliani said the Lower Valley agreement calls for a payment of $10,000 for the entire community to be covered, a value substantially less than the proposed resident fee.

East Deer will be joining Harmar, Springdale, Cheswick, Springdale Township and Verona under Lower Valley’s coverage.

Taliani said an EMS station is being planned for the township as well. A new Lower Valley station will find a home in the former medical care office along Freeport Road in East Deer. An ambulance will be kept on-site he said.

Construction is scheduled to be completed by the new year.

The new norm?

The regionalization of EMS services is a quickly rising trend throughought the state.

The local EMS challenges mimic a nationwide crisis that is the result of insufficient insurance reimbursements, limited state, local and federal funding, and poor fundraising results.

There were 1,645 EMS agencies statewide in 2013, according to the Pennsylvania Fire and Emergency Services Institute. By 2017, the number dipped to 1,278 — which was a 22% decrease.

Staffing is a major issue because of mediocre pay rates, many say. According to salary.com, EMTs in Pennsylvania earn about $40,000 a year, or about $19 an hour.

Entry-level positions are paid about $31,000 a year.

According to public policy platform EMS1.com, EMTs trained for as few as 40 hours at the turn of the century.

Now, EMT programs require 120 to 150 hours of training, including both classroom and practical experience. EMTs are required to complete continuing education as well.


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