27 February 2026, 11:00 PM

Communities across NSW will receive a boost for emergency health care as more regional paramedics are recruited and a new class of paramedic interns and emergency call takers is inducted into their roles.
An additional 125 paramedics will begin working across regional NSW in coming months as part of the NSW Government's commitment to deliver 500 additional paramedics to regional, rural and remote areas.
These paramedics are the third group to join NSW Ambulance as part of the regional 500, joining 250 others who are already on the road.
Paramedics have already started in Grafton, and more will start in Gunnedah, Tea Gardens, and Tweed Heeds from Saturday, 28 February 2026. Additional locations will be announced in coming months.
NSW Ambulance has been consulting with staff and the Health Services Union about the proposed locations with consultation ongoing.
The additional paramedics will help optimise response times and patient outcomes as well as provide support to existing paramedics who continue to provide world-class emergency and mobile healthcare across regional NSW.
The NSW Government will continue to roll out the additional 500 paramedics for regional NSW next year, with future locations determined through NSW Ambulance’s evidence based, best practice service and workforce planning as well as consultation with staff and the Health Services Union.
In 2024, Ballina, Bathurst, Broken Hill, Goulburn, Kangaroo Valley, Lismore, Lithgow, Mudgee, Parkes, Port Macquarie, South West Rocks and Tottenham received additional paramedics as part of the first tranche of the regional 500 program.
As part of the second tranche in 2025, Albury, Blayney, Deniliquin, Dubbo, Moree, Orange, Tamworth South, Temora, Wagga Wagga, Yamba and Young received additional paramedics.
The NSW Government is also investing $10 million into health worker housing for paramedics in regional NSW as part of the $200.1 million Key Health Worker Accommodation program.
NSW Ambulance has also welcomed 118 new paramedic interns and 26 trainee emergency medical call takers, who were officially inducted in a ceremony at the State Operations Centre in Sydney Olympic Park today.
Following a successful 2025 which saw more than 1,000 paramedic interns and emergency medical call takers join the workforce, 2026 is starting off strong by delivering a significant boost to frontline healthcare services across the state.
These latest recruits bring a diverse range of skills and experiences to NSW Ambulance, including paramedic intern Tomas Scone, a former Australian Defence Force infantry soldier, and trainee emergency medical call taker Jillian Suggate, who formerly worked with the NSW Reconstruction Authority and disaster relief initiatives overseas.
The paramedic interns will now commence the on-road phase of their 12-month internship, working at locations across NSW before transitioning into permanent roles in both metropolitan and regional communities.
The trainee emergency medical call takers will be posted to the Sydney, Northern and Western control centres.
NSW Minister for Regional Health, Ryan Park said this boost to the paramedic workforce ensures patients right across NSW continue to receive the highest quality emergency medical care, regardless of where they live.
“We are rebuilding our emergency health services by investing in our paramedics. Our commitment to recruit 500 regional paramedics is already helping deliver world-class emergency care to regional and rural communities," he said
“We know how critical timely healthcare is, and these new roles will help improve outcomes for patients and their families.”