Skip to content
Emergency Services, Government NSW

Western Sydney paramedics being sent to wealthier suburbs to plug gaps, leaving patients at risk

HSU NSW 3 mins read

Western Sydney paramedics being sent to wealthier suburbs to plug gaps, leaving patients at risk

Western Sydney communities are being put at risk, with paramedic response times being delayed because they are plugging gaps in other suburbs. 

The Health Services Union is warning communities are being short-changed in a dangerous way, because of rostering failures. 

In some communities in the Greater Sydney area, wait times for an ambulance during a 'Priority 1' lights and sirens job is nearly 20 minutes. That can be a matter of life and death. 

Members of the Health Services Union say staffing levels and crews being diverted to plug gaps elsewhere are major contributing factors to this lapse in response times. 

“This is not about asking the state government for more money. The money is already there. NSW Ambulance was allocated $1.76 billion over four years to increase paramedic numbers and fill rosters, but that’s not happening,” Health Services Secretary Secretary Gerard Hayes said. 

HSU members are urging the NSW Government and Ministry of Health to direct NSW Ambulance to use the funding appropriately by back-filling the rosters for paramedics.

Members and delegates are meeting with local MPs across the state to push for immediate action. 

“The NSW Government must act now to protect patient safety and ensure that taxpayer money is used as intended; to provide fully staffed, sustainable paramedic services that meet the needs of the people of New South Wales. 

“What we are seeing is that some crews are considered “extra” under the current model, and they aren’t replaced if they can’t make their shift. They weren’t intended to be extras, they are life-saving positions and they should be back-filled so communities don’t go without,” Gerard Hayes said. 

The people of New South Wales were promised 1,800 additional paramedics over four years under the previous government. And the current Labor government has committed to 500 more regional paramedics. 

“When the government funds three paramedic crews in a community, that community deserves to have three paramedic crews available—not fewer,” Alex McAnulty, a HSU delegate from Western Sydney stated. 

NSW Ambulance, through the Planned Ambulance Rosters (PAR) system, routinely redirects paramedic crews in funded areas with poorer health outcomes, such as South West Sydney, to more affluent areas including Sydney's east and south east. 

“This isn’t just mismanagement—it’s an unjust redistribution of resources away from the communities that need them the most,” the delegate continued. 

“People in Western and South West Sydney are paying taxes to fund their own paramedic crews, only to see those crews sent elsewhere.”

 

The Human Cost of Poor Staffing Practices

This failure to maintain staffing levels has devastating consequences:

  • Delayed emergency responses: Fewer paramedics on duty mean longer wait times for ambulances, which can result in preventable deaths.

  • Increased strain on paramedics: Fatigue and burnout are at crisis levels, with paramedics forced to work overtime, often past their 12-hour shifts without breaks.

  • Greater pressure on hospitals: Paramedics do more than transport patients—they provide critical care that can prevent hospital presentations. When ambulance services are stretched too thin, more patients flood emergency departments.

 

South West Sydney

Sydney Central/ South East Sydney

Area

Response Time (P1)

Area

Response Time (P1)

Campbelltown

13.7

Sydney Inner City

11.0

Camden

16.4

Eastern Suburbs -North

13.0

Wollondilly

19.3

Kogarah – Rockdale

11.7

Bringelly - Green Valley

16.7

 

Fairfield

14.2

Bankstown

13.4

AVERAGE

16.6

AVERAGE

11.9

Movement of Crews Comparisons



Western Sydney

North Sydney

Area

Response Time (P1)

Area

Response Time (P1)

Parramatta

13.5

North Sydney - Mosman

13.5

Blacktown

13.4

Chatswood – Lane Cove

12.4

Blacktown - North

17.1

Ku-ring-gai

13.8

Baulkham Hills

16.0

 

Rouse Hill

18.7

AVERAGE

16.6

AVERAGE

13.2



*Based off data from Bureau of Health Information

To arrange interviews please call Kathleen Ferguson - 0421 522 080 

 

More from this category

  • Community, Government NSW
  • 12/06/2026
  • 15:27
Parents for Climate

Parents to NSW Government: our kids can’t afford another coal expansion

Friday 12 June 2026 The NSW Government today ignored a clear warning from its own independent climate adviser: that expanding coal mining breaks the state's climate laws, and our kids will pay for it. The Government accepted four of the Commission's five findings but refused to accept the most important one: that continued coal mine extensions and expansions are not consistent with the emissions reduction targets in NSW's own Climate Change Act or the Paris Agreement. The response simply restates existing policy. Parents for Climate, representing thousands of NSW families, said the response was a test of whether the Minns…

  • Government NSW, Medical Health Aged Care
  • 11/06/2026
  • 15:25
ASMOF NSW - The Doctors' Union

Westmead figures confirm what doctors have warned for years: NSW hospitals are under unacceptable pressure

ASMOF NSW – The Doctors Union says recent reporting on worsening wait times and ambulance ramping at Westmead Hospital confirms what frontline doctors have been telling the NSW Government for the past two years: NSW hospitals are under unacceptable pressure and its medical staff and patients who are paying the price. The latest Bureau of Health Information data, reported in the Sydney Morning Herald, shows Westmead Hospital’s emergency department is recording some of the worst wait times and ambulance transfer delays in NSW, despite the hospital’s billion-dollar redevelopment. ASMOF NSW President Dr Nicholas Spooner said the figures showed the crisis…

  • Community, Government NSW
  • 04/06/2026
  • 07:07
Uniting NSW.ACT

Uniting welcomes changes to NSW’s unfair drug driving laws – now for further positive drug law reform

Media Release 4th June 2026 Uniting welcomes changes to NSW’s unfair drug driving laws – now for further positive drug law reform Uniting has welcomed today’s announcement by the NSW Government of proposed changes to laws relating to medicinal cannabis use and driving in the state. Alexandra Hogan, Uniting NSW.ACT’s Social Justice Lead said: “We need a health and well-being response to drug use, and that includes people who drive, and use prescribed medicinal cannabis. “Today’s announcement is recognition that NSW Road and Transport Act needs to be amended to be in step with the current legal status of medicinal…

Media Outreach made fast, easy, simple.

Feature your press release on Medianet's News Hub every time you distribute with Medianet. Pay per release or save with a subscription.