Representative Selina Bliss (R-AZ) helped push Arizona into a 27-state agreement that allows qualified EMTs and paramedics to work across state lines without having to restart the licensing process, and the agreement has been signed into law.
Rep. Bliss led the House effort through her bill, House Bill 2437, which mirrored the Senate version that ultimately landed on the governor's desk as well. For her, it wasn't just about cutting paperwork; it was about making sure Arizona has the emergency personnel it needs, wherever and whenever they're needed most.
This plan to improve crews' handling of aeromedical transports, rural emergencies, tribal community calls, and cross-border patient transfers no longer requires them to navigate a separate licensing hurdle every time they cross a state line.
The law also gives veterans and military members transitioning out of active duty a faster path to licensure, treating their service training as meeting the baseline requirements rather than making them start from scratch.
That last piece matters in a state like Arizona, which stretches across dense cities, remote rural areas, and large tribal lands, each with their own demands on emergency services and not always enough personnel to meet them.
With the law signed, Arizona is now working to appoint a Compact Commissioner and connect its systems to the National EMS Coordinated Database, the final steps needed before the new licensing privileges are fully operational.
Twenty-six other states were already in the compact before Arizona joined. Bliss helped ensure the state wasn't sitting on the sidelines, and that the next paramedic headed into Arizona during an emergency won't be stuck waiting for a piece of paper.
"Stronger EMS. Safer communities," House Republicans emphasized.







