Meeting the need From the cover
SPRINGWOODS VILLAGE PKWY.
The big picture
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1 Station 411 • 18334 Stuebner Airline Road, Spring • Opened Sept. 22 • Partner: None 2 Station 412 • 21455 Imperial Valley Drive, Spring • Opened Sept. 22 • Partner: Ponderosa Fire Department 3 Station 601 • 8639 Fallbrook Drive, Houston • Opened Jan. 20 • Partner: Cypress Creek Fire Department 4 Station 602 • 2900 Cypresswood Drive, Spring • Opened Jan. 13 • Partner: Spring Fire Department 5 Station 603 • 22310 Springwoods Village Parkway, Spring • Opened Jan. 13 • Partner: Spring Fire Department HCESD 11 new stations The stations will provide ambulatory care and transport across the Spring and Klein area.
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As the Spring and Klein areas continue to grow in population, Harris County Emergency Services District No. 11 is working to expand to meet the needs of residents with new stations and services. Since September, HCESD 11 has opened ve new 24-hour mobile health care stations across the Spring and Klein areas in partnership with the Spring Fire Department, Cypress Creek Fire Department and Ponderosa Fire Department. “These new 24-hour ambulance stations are designed to give our community more coverage, enabling our crews to respond to calls more eciently and faster,” HCESD 11 CEO Jordan Anderson said. HCESD 11 is a governing entity responsible for providing emergency health care to residents within the district. District rst responders serve over 700,000 residents within 177 square miles of northern Harris County. Ocials with the Spring Fire Department—a longtime partner of HCESD 11 for new stations— emphasized the importance of the partnerships. “Our partnership with HCESD 11 continues to be a cornerstone of our operations,” Assistant Fire Chief Robert Logan said. “We work together every day on the scenes we’re dispatched to.”
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IMPERIAL VALLEY DR.
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SOURCE: HARRIS COUNTY ESD 11COMMUNITY IMPACT
Also of note
The impact
with a critical condition—was roughly 8 min- utes and 23 seconds. For lower-acuity patients, response times range from 10-14 minutes. The district’s goal is to keep response times for high-acuity patients under 10 minutes and under 15-20 minutes for lower-acuity patients.
HCESD 11 Public Information Ocer Miranda Sevcik said the new stations ensure the district continues to provide timely response to both high- and low-acuity patients across the district’s service area. According to data from HCESD 11, the average response time for high-acuity patients—or those
In addition to the new stations, the Spring Fire Department has completed work on the $56 million W.W. ‘Cotton’ Weaver Training Center that will centralize equipment and support services for the area as well as serve as a logistics hub. “We are fully functional in our 51,000-square-foot logistics building and two burn buildings,” Spring Fire Chief Scott Seifert said. “The eciencies and exibility are nearly endless, and our crews can train while remaining ready to respond.”
HCESD 11 calls for service and transport HCESD 11 tracks the number of calls for service as well as the number of calls where transport is needed. Transports Calls for service
7,500
The new training center includes:
6,000
51,000 square feet of space
4,500
3,000
Two burn buildings
1,500
27 recongurable burn areas
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A full-service re equipment repair station
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2025
NOTE: DECEMBER 2025 DATA NOT AVAILABLE.
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