Wellington_Free_Ambulance

Wellington Free Ambulance

Wellington Free Ambulance

Add article description


Wellington Free Ambulance (WFA), also known simply as Wellington Free, is a charitable organisation providing free to the patient ambulance services in the Greater Wellington Region of New Zealand.

Quick Facts Formation, Type ...

History

Former base in Cable Street

The Wellington Free Ambulance service was inaugurated on 9 November 1927 by the mayor of Wellington, Sir Charles Norwood. The catalyst for establishing a free ambulance service for the Wellington community came from the frustration of seeing an injured man lying on the road, and no hospital ambulance being available.

The service began operating from the Old Navals boatshed, which later became the Wellington Rowing Club clubhouse. The original station building soon proved to be less than desirable and in 1932, Lord Bledisloe laid the foundation stone on a purpose-built station in Cable Street.

Wellington Free expanded, and in 1956 the first station to be built out of Wellington City was established in Lower Hutt, followed by stations in Upper Hutt (1961), and Porirua (1963). The Kapiti Coast got its ambulance station in 1977, the same year a station was established in Newtown.

By the early 1990s, Wellington Free had outgrown its Cable St building. After a major fundraising effort, in 1994 then-Prince Charles opened a replacement station in Davis Street, Thorndon, which still operates as the service's headquarters today.

Bases were established in Waikanae and Wainuiomata in 1999, a replacement Porirua Station building opened in October 2000, followed by the Linkspan Response Post on the Wellington Waterfront in November 2008, and the Johnsonville Station in May 2010.

In March 2011, after a concerted fundraising and significant contribution by the Wellington Free Ambulance Trust, the Newtown Regional Ambulance Station was opened in the new Wellington Hospital grounds. In March 2012, after winning a Government tender to outsource the last DHB run ambulance service in the Wairarapa, Wellington Free Ambulance became the ambulance service in for the region.

Operations

Volkswagen Crafter -Emergency Ambulance Service
Mercedes Sprinter - Emergency Ambulance Service
Mercedes Sprinter - Patient Transfer Services
Mazda 6 - Critical care paramedic
Mitsubishi - Rescue 1

The service annually assists nearly 74,000 patients in the Greater Wellington Region. The headquarters includes vehicle maintenance facilities, and a communications centre - one of three in the national network.

Funding

The cost of running the service in 2013 was $21M. 80% of this cost is met by the Ministry of Health and the Accident Compensation Corporation.[1][2] The remainder comes from donations and bequests from the public, proceeds from first aid training and supplies, and medical alarms.

Resources

As of 2014 the service has the following resources:[1]

  • 10 ambulance stations
  • 25 ambulances
  • 3 emergency fast response vehicles
  • 2 4WD rescue vehicles
  • 17 patient transport vehicles
  • 6 events ambulances
  • 2 Urgent Community Care vehicles
  • 1 major incident response truck
  • 2 major incident response trailers

References

  • Beasley, A.W. (1995). Borne Free - Wellington Free Ambulance 1927-1994. Grantham House. ISBN 1-86934-047-7.
  1. "Annual Report" (PDF). Wellington Free Ambulance. 2006. Archived from the original (PDF) on 2008-04-10. Retrieved 2007-11-12.

Share this article:

This article uses material from the Wikipedia article Wellington_Free_Ambulance, and is written by contributors. Text is available under a CC BY-SA 4.0 International License; additional terms may apply. Images, videos and audio are available under their respective licenses.