GC Fire District 3, Columbia EMS reach agreement on new contract
CHERYL SCHWEIZER | Hagadone News Network | UPDATED 4 hours, 51 minutes AGO
Senior Reporter Cheryl Schweizer is a journalist with more than 30 years of experience serving small communities in the Pacific Northwest. She began her post-high-school education at Treasure Valley Community College and enerned her journalism degree at Oregon State University. After working for multiple publications, she has settled down at the Columbia Basin Herald and has been a staple of the newsroom for more than a decade. Schweizer’s dedication to her communities and profession has earned her the nickname “The Baroness of Bylines.” She covers a variety of beats including health, business and various municipalities. | April 21, 2026 5:04 PM
QUINCY — Grant County Fire District 3 and Columbia EMS have reached agreement to amend the existing contract for emergency medical services. Fire District 3 Chief David Durfee said the one-year contract includes a 20% increase in the contract price.
“Columbia EMS continues to serve as a contracted ambulance transport provider within much of the district and provides (advanced life support) level care during transport,” Durfee wrote in a press release announcing the agreement.
Leslie Siebert, owner of Columbia EMS, said the amendment increases the GCFD 3 yearly contract price to about $256,130. Durfee said the agreement is just between the fire district and the ambulance service.
“The city still has its own separate agreement with Columbia EMS,” Durfee said in a separate interview.
A provision was made for 2025 as well.
“We gave them a one-time payment for 2025 with the 20% increase,” he said.
Additional reporting requirements were added as part of the agreement, including information on call volume, response times and utilization, Durfee said.
The city of Quincy contracts with GCFD 3 for fire services and with Columbia EMS for ambulance services. Siebert said the city pays Columbia EMS about $350,600 per year. The two contracts total about $606,750 per year.
Columbia EMS provides ALS services to most, but not all, of GCFD 3, and as a result the district also has contracts with Royal Slope-Rescue-EMS and Lifeline Ambulance. Lifeline also is a private company and provides ALS and transport services in and around Ephrata.
Emergency medical services are expensive – a study commissioned by GCFD 3 and Quincy city officials estimated an annual cost of as much as $1.8 million if the fire district provided an entire ambulance program. Durfee said that while it probably wouldn’t cost that much, it would be expensive.
“EMS is such a complex issue,” he said.
EMS providers are reimbursed by insurance for the patients that have it, but Siebert said reimbursement differs substantially from one insurance provider to another.
“Medicare and Medicaid make it difficult for us to recover our costs,” she said in response to an email from the Columbia Basin Herald. “Reimbursement rates are federally capped, meaning payments do not reflect the actual cost of providing care. This applies equally to private and public EMS agencies.”
Siebert said about two-thirds of the population in the Columbia EMS service area are Medicare or Medicaid patients.
The study recommended that the agencies and business providing EMS, or paying for it, work to strengthen the system, which is, Durfee said, the goal of an initiative to add a paramedic to GCFD 3’s staff. That paramedic will work out of the George fire station, he said.
“We’re in the beginning stages,” he said.
The fire district will add a “fire-based advanced life support intercept unit,” an SUV that would be stocked with advanced lifesaving equipment, he said.
“The district is satisfied with the level of service currently being provided,” Durfee said in the press release. “The district does not currently have plans to become a transporting agency and remains focused on its role in providing emergency medical response and system coordination. At the same time, the district is committed to ensuring appropriate contingency plans are in place to maintain reliable service for the community.”
ARTICLES BY CHERYL SCHWEIZER
GC Fire District 3, Columbia EMS reach agreement on new contract
QUINCY — Grant County Fire District 3 and Columbia EMS have reached agreement to amend the existing contract for emergency medical services. Fire District 3 Chief David Durfee said the one-year contract includes a 20% increase in the contract price.
Construction to begin this spring on Royal City road project
ROYAL CITY — The first phase of improvements to Apple Avenue Northeast is scheduled to begin this spring. Royal City City Council members voted on a contract for the project Tuesday. Public Works Director Mauricio Romero said construction is scheduled to begin either in late May or the first week of June. Council members voted on awarding the construction contract, about $903,300, to Wheeler Excavation, Benton City. Council members also voted on a $135,000 construction engineering contract with Anderson Perry, La Grande, project engineers.
Interlocal agreement could advance lake crossing study
MOSES LAKE — The city of Moses Lake will take the lead in obtaining funding for an environmental impact study of a possible second crossing of Moses Lake. Moses Lake City Council members approved an interlocal agreement with Grant County April 14, and it’s scheduled for a vote of the Grant County Commissioners Tuesday. Moses Lake City Manager Rob Karlinsey told council members it’s a first step toward fulfilling one of the council’s top goals, which is to at least start studying the possibility of a second lake crossing. “We have applied for federal funding to help us study that. For us to receive that funding, we need to have an interlocal agreement with the county, because the likely locations of that lake crossing are going to be in (the) unincorporated county,” Karlinsey said.