Deputy director fired, director suspended with pay pending outcome of review
BY MIKE FUHRMAN

Senior county administrators are conducting a thorough investigation of Iredell County Emergency Medical Services in response to concerns raised by current and former EMS employees.

County Manager Beth Mull confirmed the investigation, which she said was initiated after EMS staff complained about the “culture” in the department. The scope of the investigation, she added, has widened as a result of information that was obtained in the early stages of the internal review.

“As part of the investigation, we’re going through all of our policies, procedures, inventory — everything,” Mull explained.

According to public records obtained by Iredell Free News, EMS Director Blair Richey was placed on non-disciplinary investigatory suspension with pay on June 12. 

Deputy Director Andrew Cardwell, who was suspended with pay on the same date, was fired four days later for “violations of the Personnel Ordinance” and statements he made during a pre-disciplinary conference, according to public records.

Citing state law prohibiting the release of protected personnel information and the ongoing investigation, Mull declined to discuss specific details about the staff complaints or the reasons for Richey’s suspension and Cardwell’s suspension and subsequent termination.

As the investigation was beginning, county administration notified state regulators about the department’s “administrative issues.” As a result, EMS Medical Director Nicholas Petit agreed that EMS personnel would not administer Ketamine to patients and would pause all drug-assisted intubations for 30 days.

Beyond that, Mull said she did not expect any other significant impacts to the services EMS provides.

“We have a really good group that cares about the services they provide,” the county manager said. “They are running calls every day. I have no concerns at all about our staff out there providing patient care.”

Assistant County Manager Rodney Harris, who began working for the county in April, and Human Resources Director Sandra Gregory are leading the investigation, which Mull said would likely be completed within 30 days.

In an interview, Cardwell said he and Richey first became aware of the investigation during the week leading up to his termination, when Harris informed the EMS administrators that the department had a “culture” and “leadership” problem. That statement was made a day after the administrators provided Harris with reports about the inability to fill open jobs because EMS was not offering a competitive salary, Cardwell said.  

Richey, who has worked for Iredell County EMS since March 1, 2012, was promoted to EMS director on April 14, 2016.

She declined to comment about the investigation or her suspension.

However, Richey stated that she has never received a warning or been reprimanded during her 12-year career with the county. She also said she received a favorable performance review in the weeks leading up to her suspension. According to county records, she received a $6,500 raise earlier this month, boosting her annual salary to $135,963. All county employees received a 5 percent increase on that date, which takes effect in July.

Cardwell has worked for EMS since February of 2016, when he was hired as a paramedic. He was promoted to deputy director in June of 2020.

He had plenty to say about his termination, the way it was handled and why he believes it happened.

Cardwell said the evidence used in his termination was fabricated. That evidence, he said, includes text messages allegedly sent to Cardwell by another employee claiming she had sold him drugs. Those text messages include references to drug “refills” and sexual misconduct, he said. 

According to Cardwell, a former employee also supplied the county with a recorded phone call in which she asked Cardwell several pointed questions about EMS. He said he believes that phone call was part of an orchestrated effort to have him removed from his position.

Cardwell has appealed his termination to the county Personnel Review Board, which is appointed by the Board of Commissioners. A hearing will be scheduled within 30 days of his appeal.

But Cardwell does not hold out much hope that his termination will be overturned.

“My job is already posted,” he said. “They are already hiring for it.”

Instead of investigating what he claims are false complaints against him, county officials should be looking into why EMS has so many open positions, Cardwell said. There are dozens of openings, he said, because top administrators — including Mull and Harris — will not allow EMS administrators to offer a competitive wage to prospective hires, especially candidates with significant professional experience.

He also predicted that EMS would be faced with a mass exodus of paramedics if the county’s plans to dramatically reduce overtime in the department during the next fiscal year come to fruition.

“When someone calls 911, there’s not going to be a truck to respond,” he said.

When asked why he thought he was terminated and Richey suspended, Cardwell said he has come to the conclusion that county administrators want to contract out EMS services to a private firm.

“This isn’t a new game plan,” he said. “Why else would you run it into the ground like that?”

While Mull declined to comment on the information that Cardwell provided about the ongoing investigation, she rejected the former deputy director’s prediction about service levels declining. Interim department leaders are continuing efforts to recruit and hire qualified applicants for all open positions, Mull said.

The county manager also strongly denied that there was any consideration given to privatizing EMS.

In fact, Mull said, senior administration and county commissioners have recently supported efforts to expand EMS by allocating funds for 24 new EMT positions, by including funds for new trucks in the budget and 16 new paramedic positions starting July 1, and by growing the community paramedic program. The county is also preparing to pilot a partnership with Lake Norman Fire Department to funding eight full-time paramedic/firefighter positions that could be expanded to other departments throughout the county.

“We have had absolutely no conversations at all at the staff level or with the elected board about scaling back or privatizing EMS,” Mull said.

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