Tuolumne County EMS comment deadline today (June 29) as rates take effect July 1, 2026
Tuolumne County’s draft EMS policy comments close today, June 29, 2026 at 5pm. The ambulance fee schedule is marked for July 1.
Comment window closes today (June 29, 2026) at 5pm on Tuolumne County’s draft EMS policies. At the same time, the county’s ambulance fee schedule is marked “Fees Subject to Change July 1, 2026.”
What Tuolumne County says is changing in ambulance billing
Tuolumne County’s updated ambulance fee page is organized by billing code and service category (for example, BLS vs. ALS, and mileage or wait time). That structure matters because the specific fee applied can depend on the billing code tied to the billed services for a call and transport—not just where someone lives.
For the July 1 effective period, the county lists, among other items:
- BLS: $2,536.00 (A0428)
- ALS Emergency: $3,609.00 (A0427)
- Loaded mileage: $92.00 per mile (A0425)
- Wait time: $122.00 per 15 minutes
The schedule also lists line-item fees, including items such as oxygen, electrocardiograms, and treat, non transport.
Draft EMS policies open for public comment today (June 29 at 5pm)
Tuolumne County says public comment for multiple draft EMS policies closes June 29, 2026 at 5pm. The policies listed for today’s cutoff include:
- EMS Advisory Group (Policy 130.00)
- Policy Development, Revision and Review (Policy 131.00)
- ALS Skills Competency Verification and Sign-Off Form (Policy 254.10)
- Temporary Approval of EMS Mutual Aid Personnel (Policy 260.00)
- Equipment and Medication Inventory (Policy 437.00)
- Controlled Substances (Policy 439.00)
The county also notes a practical access update for commenters: the public-comment link was updated on May 22, 2026 after a previous link didn’t allow EMS Agency access to some comments. If someone submitted public comment between May 11, 2026 and May 22, 2026 before 5pm, the county asks that the comment be resubmitted using the updated link.
Other policy deadline: Public comment for Ambulance Dispatch (Policy 320.00) runs until July 5, 2026 at 5pm.
What the January 2026 EMS system assessment says about response performance
Tuolumne County points to a January 2026 EMS system assessment by Healthcare Strategists. The report describes how the county’s geography makes it challenging to achieve consistently low response times, noting that many areas are difficult to reach and that response-time distribution includes slower responses in more remote parts of the county.
The assessment also argues against focusing on response times alone. It recommends a more nuanced approach—using emergency medical dispatch tools such as EMD and MPDS so that systems can route high-acuity calls to the fastest response while still allowing relaxed response times when clinically justified.
On deployment and unit positioning, the assessment says the system currently uses a static deployment plan, with units not temporarily moved to fill gaps. It also describes workload as uneven across ambulance stations, with some stations comparatively slower.
How the assessment connects EMS operations to billing and the “revenue cycle”
The report links operational choices, documentation, and workflow to how efficiently EMS claims move through the billing process. It says patient billing is handled by county staff and notes that keeping billing in-house is described as best practice in the assessment.
But it also highlights a risk area: in Tuolumne County’s structure, the ambulance contractor is paid through the enterprise fund rather than directly through patient billing. The assessment says that setup can reduce incentives for ensuring patient care reports are completed with information needed for claims processing—creating additional follow-up labor for county staff and delays in the revenue cycle.
The report also describes system planning that includes maintaining agreements with Adventist Health Sonora as a hospital base station that provides online medical direction.
What Sonora residents can do before 5pm—and what happens next
If you want Tuolumne County to consider changes to these draft EMS policies, today (June 29) is the last day for the policies closing at 5pm. Use the county’s Draft Policies page to submit your comments.
Because these materials are draft policies, the county’s process after today will depend on what it does with the feedback—so it’s worth checking the county’s next steps described on the draft-policy posting and related EMS materials.
Meanwhile, the updated ambulance fee schedule is marked for July 1, 2026. For residents who are impacted by ambulance billing—whether as patients, caregivers, or taxpayers watching county services—today’s comment deadline is the quickest window to weigh in before the fee schedule timing takes effect.
Sources
Discover more from Interactive News
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.