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Virginia Beach now limits most ambulances to no lights/sirens to reduce crashes, despite minimal time savings.
Virginia Beach has begun requiring most city ambulances to respond without lights and sirens, starting in November, after research showed minimal time savings—just 2 to 3 minutes—while nearly doubling crash risks.
The policy, backed by EMS staff, prioritizes safety, especially since most emergencies aren’t significantly affected by faster arrival.
Only 27 calls in November were upgraded to lights-and-sirens, with two-thirds of those patients refusing transport.
Ambulances remain limited to 20 mph over the speed limit and must follow school zone rules, though they can use traffic signal preemption.
The rule applies to city-operated units, not private ones unless partnered with the city.
Police and fire departments are unaffected.
The move aligns Virginia Beach with cities like Raleigh, Charlotte, and Fort Worth adopting similar safety-focused policies.
Virginia Beach ahora limita la mayoría de las ambulancias a no tener luces/sirenas para reducir los accidentes, a pesar de un mínimo ahorro de tiempo.