Pharr is ending its EMS contract due to high costs. This move could shake up how emergency medical services are delivered in the city, so residents should pay attention to the upcoming changes.
At a glance
Declining — being discussed less frequently. 0 mentions in the last 30 days.
Taxpayers might see some relief, but the city needs to figure out a cheaper way to provide ambulance services.
The city's budget could benefit from this, and hopefully, residents will get good service without breaking the bank.
Residents might face service disruptions or changes in response times while the city sorts out a new plan.
Follow this issue in Pharr
Get an alert when it comes back up at City Hall — one plain-English email a week.
Free. Unsubscribe with one click any time. We never sell your email.
Bankruptcy judge approves Texas city’s purchase of EMS company for $1M EMS1