Improved efficiency an expected result
of Crown Ambulance restructure
PRESQUE ISLE — Officials at The Aroostook Medical Center are enhancing the administrative structure of Crown Ambulance to streamline communication and improve efficiency.
TAMC OFFICIALS are enhancing the administrative structure of Crown Ambulance to streamline communication and improve efficiency by adding Walter Mosher and Benjamin Everett as clinical supervisors of Crown Ambulance. They join Perry Jackson, who was one of the first people hired when TAMC took over operations of the former Keegan Ambulance Service. Crown’s leadership team are, from left: Jackson, supervisor at Crown’s ambulance bases in Fort Fairfield and Limestone; Mosher, supervisor at the Mars Hill base; and Everett, who is responsible for the Presque Isle site.
Benjamin Everett and Walter Mosher will be joining Perry Jackson as clinical supervisors of Crown Ambulance. This will allow Crown to have a team of clinical supervisors covering day-to-day duties and available on-call after hours to manage operations.
Supervisors will work two administrative days, plus a rotating 24-hour duty shift each week. In addition to the changes in leadership scheduling and coverage, each supervisor will be directly responsible for each of Crown’s ambulance bases located in Mars Hill, Presque Isle, Fort Fairfield and Limestone.
“This streamlining will allow for better, more direct communication between staff and leadership,” said Daryl Boucher, TAMC emergency services director. “We are looking forward to the wealth of talent, experience and enthusiasm that this leadership team will bring to the organization.”
Mosher has worked as a part-time paramedic for several years. He holds multiple professional certifications and brings a tremendous amount of experience to the position. Mosher previously served as a district leader for Subway, responsible for leadership and management of several hundred employees in Subway stores in Maine as far south as Calais.
Everett is being promoted from his position as a full-time critical care transport paramedic at Crown. He is a military veteran having served in the Middle East. Everett has earned an AAS degree from Northern Maine Community College, and is currently enrolled in the business management program at the University of Maine at Presque Isle.
Jackson has been employed at TAMC since 1988, and was one of the first people hired when TAMC took over operations of the former Keegan Ambulance Service. He has attained multiple professional certifications including Pediatric and Adult Critical Care Transport. Jackson was an original member of the state Community Paramedic Task Force, and continues to be involved in Aroostook Region EMS Council meetings and the ARC Special Olympics management team.