BANGOR, Maine — The Bangor Fire Department is adding its first EMS-only paramedic positions as medical call volume continues to rise and fire calls decline.
The new fire medic roles are intended to help meet growing demand for emergency medical care while easing the workload on firefighters, News Center Maine reported.
| ON-DEMAND WEBINAR: AI 101 to 201 — leveling up practical skills
At the Bangor Fire Department, emergency medical care has traditionally been handled by firefighter/paramedics. Fire paramedics Amber Totilas and Charlotte Duncan are now stepping in as the department’s first EMS-only crew.
“Having just a paramedic role really allows us to focus on just the medicine,” Duncan said.
Since starting nearly two weeks ago, Totilas and Duncan have been responding to up to eight calls a day during 10-hour shifts, four days a week. Totilas said the EMS-only roles let paramedics focus on medical calls while keeping firefighters available for fire emergencies.
“It also frees up the firefighters for their dual role capabilities for those true fire-related incidents,” Division Chief Jeremy Ogden said.
Ogden said Bangor firefighter/paramedics responded to more than 9,000 medical calls in 2025, making up roughly 85% to 90% of the department’s call volume.
That demand helped drive the one-year EMS-only pilot program, which is being funded within the department’s current budget.
Ogden said the department hopes to add two more EMS-only positions this summer to help meet growing demand for medical calls.
Is your department considering EMS-only positions as medical call volume grows? How would a model like Bangor’s work in your agency?
Fire crews battled large wildfires in Broward and Miami-Dade counties as smoke reduced visibility, forced road closures
Danielson’s interim fire chief unveiled a recovery plan focused on recruitment, morale and emergency readiness after more than half the volunteer department resigned
Twenty-six workers were safely evacuated from Platform Habitat 9 miles off the Southern California coast
