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PRIVACY
Economic Development

Row over cost of bringing ambulances back to Solihull

The town’s ambulance station closed last September and ambulances were moved to a new site in Erdington

General view of Solihull Hospital, West Midlands. PRESS ASSOCIATION Photo. Picture date: Thursday December 19, 2013. See PA story HEALTH Inquiry. Photo credit should read: Joe Giddens/PA Wire

Paramedic bosses have bowed to pressure and agreed to return an ambulance base to Solihull – though there is a row brewing over the cost.

The town’s ambulance station closed last September and ambulances were moved to a new site in Erdington.

But now West Midlands Ambulance Service has agreed to create a new base at Solihull Hospital amid fears the move away had caused delays in 999 response times.

In one incident, on October 10 last year, an 83-year-old woman waited almost an hour and 20 minutes for a paramedic after hurting herself in a fall outside Berkswell Station. Figures showed average response times for immediately life-threatening calls and for conveyancing ambulances had both slightly increased in the last 12 months, although they were still well within government targets.

A meeting of watchdog body Healthwatch Solihull heard a location at Solihull Hospital had been identifed – but a dispute remained over the costs involved.

Ambulance service area manager Dean Jenkins said: “We approached Solihull Hospital, who welcomed us, and we identified a building for us to use.

“But the costs quoted by the hospital were rather excessive.”

Healthwatch Solihull chief executive Sam Mills said: “Last meeting, everybody said they wanted an ambulance base in Solihull. The Trust has relented and agreed to have one but then it has been delay after delay. Solihull Hospital is setting the cost extortionately high.