Wake County may limit EMS lights, sirens in effort to reduce crashes
AI-generated summary reviewed by our newsroom.
- Wake County proposes limiting lights-and-sirens responses to 20% of EMS calls.
- EMS reports 21 lights-and-sirens crashes year-to-date, two totalled ambulances.
- Board plans public sessions and phased rollout, full adoption possible by March 2026.
Wake County may reduce the number of EMS calls that crews respond to using lights and sirens in an effort to reduce crashes
“Red lights and sirens response for first responders is very dangerous,” Wake County Emergency Medical Services Director Dr. Jon Studneck said Monday.
According to Wake County, the EMS department has had 21 lights-and-sirens accidents since January. There have been no significant injuries, but two ambulances have been totaled.
Eighty percent of EMS calls receive a lights and siren response. The new method would mean only 20 calls of every 100 would receive a lights and siren response. County leaders said response times for all incidents average 15 to 17 minutes.
Commissioner Shinica Thomas had concerns about this proposal’s impact on response times for less serious calls.
“For lower-acuity calls, we could end up with response times for someone to get an ambulance as long as 60 minutes. So, an hour?” she questioned.
Studneck said Thomas was correct.
“If you’re the person with a broken leg and in pain, 60 minutes is going to feel like a really long time,” said Commissioner Vickie Adamson.
County leaders said this plan could be phased in. The idea is to work with community partners, including 911 centers, first responders and local leaders, to help navigate this shift in policy. The issue of response times kept resurfacing.
The full county board will weigh in on this plan. Community informational sessions have also been scheduled. This proposal could be completely implemented by March 2026.
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This story was originally published October 28, 2025 at 8:18 AM.