D'Ambrosio v. Department of Health and Senior Services

958 A.2d 110, 403 N.J. Super. 321, 2008 WL 4722631, 2008 N.J. Super. LEXIS 220
CourtNew Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division
DecidedOctober 29, 2008
DocketA-0914-07T3
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 958 A.2d 110 (D'Ambrosio v. Department of Health and Senior Services) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Jersey Superior Court Appellate Division primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
D'Ambrosio v. Department of Health and Senior Services, 958 A.2d 110, 403 N.J. Super. 321, 2008 WL 4722631, 2008 N.J. Super. LEXIS 220 (N.J. Ct. App. 2008).

Opinion

958 A.2d 110 (2008)
403 N.J. Super. 321

Philip D. D'AMBROSIO, Petitioner-Appellant,
v.
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND SENIOR SERVICES, Respondent-Respondent.

No. A-0914-07T3

Superior Court of New Jersey, Appellate Division.

Submitted October 6, 2008.
Decided October 29, 2008.

*112 Stuart J. Moskovitz, Freehold, for appellant.

Anne Milgram, Attorney General, for respondent (Melissa Raksa, Deputy Attorney General, of counsel; Kimberly E. Jenkins, Deputy Attorney General, on the brief).

Before Judges CARCHMAN, R.B. COLEMAN and SABATINO.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

SABATINO, J.A.D.

Petitioner Philip D. D'Ambrosio, an emergency medical technician ("EMT"), appeals a final agency decision by the Department of Health and Senior Services ("the Department") that denied his recertification as an EMT-Basic ("EMT-B") for a period of five years. The Department's sanction was predicated upon a finding by an Administrative Law Judge ("ALJ") that petitioner had purposely altered and forged his name on records to make it appear that he had attended mandatory continuing education classes required for his recertification. Petitioner appeals the sanction and argues that there was an insufficient factual basis to support the allegation that he acted improperly.

Petitioner further alleges, for the first time on appeal, that the Department has no authority to regulate him or other EMT-Bs because the provisions of the Emergency Medical Services Act, N.J.S.A. 26:2K-7 to -53 (the "EMS Act"), and the corresponding Departmental regulations, do not apply to that particular category of EMTs. Rather, petitioner contends that it is the local municipality's exclusive responsibility to regulate EMT-Bs, based on provisions of the New Jersey Highway Traffic Safety Act of 1987, N.J.S.A. 27:5F-13.1 to -43 (the "Traffic Safety Act").

We affirm.

I.

Petitioner has been a volunteer EMT with the Fanwood Rescue Squad for nearly thirty-five years. As a volunteer, petitioner has received an EMT certification from the National Registry of Emergency Medical Technicians ("NREMT"), as well as from the State of New Jersey through the Department's Office of Emergency Medical Services ("OEMS"). The State's certification lasts for three years, and EMTs must complete a cycle of continuing education courses within that three-year period to be recertified for another three years. Prior to 2003, petitioner had never been denied either national or State recertification.

After petitioner's EMT-B State certification expired on December 31, 2003, he was not recertified because OEMS lacked documentation that he had completed the requisite number of continuing education classes. Specifically, according to OEMS records, petitioner did not take required courses seven, eight, nine and twelve.[1] To be eligible for recertification, petitioner *113 needed to take those classes within the time frame of his "recertification cycle," which was January 1, 2001 to December 31, 2003. Classes petitioner took prior to January 2001 would not have counted towards his recertification.

The Department's EMT recertification process warrants some description. All of the courses administered must be approved by OEMS. Each class is assigned a course number, which corresponds to the year that the course is offered and whether it is a "core" or an "elective" course. The middle two digits represent the retraining requirement involved (e.g. "07" or "12"). Attendees typically sign their names on a sign-in sheet at the start of each training class. This sheet also contains the date of the course and the course number. It is then collected by the course instructor at the end of class. The instructor signs the sheet and mails it, or a copy of it, to OEMS. OEMS logs the information from the sign-in sheets onto its computer database, keeping track of which EMTs have attended which courses. From this database a computer printout is generated for each EMT detailing the classes he or she has taken and any courses still needed to complete the recertification cycle.

Petitioner's wife, Nancy D'Ambrosio, is also a long-time EMT and a former captain of the Fanwood Rescue Squad. In her capacity as the squad's training officer, and after realizing he had never received his recertification card, Mrs. D'Ambrosio contacted OEMS in February 2004 and inquired about her husband's recertification status. She learned from Jeffrey Egnatovich, a public health representative with OEMS, that its records showed petitioner had not attended the requisite number of classes. Mrs. D'Ambrosio then offered to fax to Egnatovich copies of sign-in sheets for classes that she claimed her husband had attended. As the rescue squad's training officer at the time, Mrs. D'Ambrosio customarily retained copies of class attendance sheets for her records.

Egnatovich received two documents via fax from Mrs. D'Ambrosio. The first was a photocopy of a sign-in sheet with a handwritten date of "11/14/2001," and with a course number, also in handwriting, of "XX-XX-XXXX." The second document was a photocopy of what was purported to be a course sign-in sheet with the typed date of "02/12/02," and the typed course number "XX-XX-XXXX."

On both of these sheets, petitioner's name was listed last. This placement caught Egnatovich's eye. As Egnatovich entered the computer database to check on petitioner's records, he discovered that course number "XX-XX-XXXX" did not exist. Egnatovich then looked more closely at the sign-in sheet for that course on the fax that Mrs. D'Ambrosio had sent him. He perceived that the course number on the fax had been altered, in that the number "1" had been written over the number "0" in both the course number and the course date. Egnatovich then checked the course database and discovered that there was a course numbered "XX-XX-XXXX" that had been offered on November 14, 2000, not November 14, 2001. Based on these discrepancies, Egnatovich concluded that the information submitted by Mrs. D'Ambrosio concerning the first sign-in sheet was not accurate.

Suspecting that the second sign-in sheet had also been altered, Egnatovich contacted Saint Barnabas Medical Center's EMS Training Academy and requested a copy of the sign-in sheet for course number XX-XX-XXXX. As the course provider, Saint Barnabas was responsible for maintaining the original sign-in sheets and for transmitting copies to OEMS so that attendees received appropriate course credit. As requested, *114 Saint Barnabas faxed to Egnatovich a photocopy of its original sign-in sheet for the course. Petitioner's name was not on that original. When comparing the original with the fax he had received from petitioner's wife, Egnatovich noticed that the signature of the course instructor, Joel Bunis, appeared "greatly different" on the two documents.

Egnatovich also asked Saint Barnabas to provide the original sign-in sheet for course number XX-XX-XXXX, to compare it with what he received from Mrs. D'Ambrosio. He was informed that the hospital had apparently destroyed that particular record. Egnatovich could not locate in OEMS's own files the original copy of the sign-in sheet from that course.

Egnatovich then contacted Bunis and showed him the sign-in sheet for course number XX-XX-XXXX that he had received from Mrs. D'Ambrosio. Bunis told him that it was "definitely not" his signature on that faxed sheet. Bunis stated to Egnatovich that he always checked the sign-in sheet at the end of each class he taught.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
958 A.2d 110, 403 N.J. Super. 321, 2008 WL 4722631, 2008 N.J. Super. LEXIS 220, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dambrosio-v-department-of-health-and-senior-services-njsuperctappdiv-2008.