Enterprise Rescue Nominated for AAMS Community Impact Award
Association of Air Medical Services Recognizes ERI for Efforts in Air Medical Industry
ENTERPRISE, Ala. (Sept. 26, 2025) — Enterprise Rescue has been nominated for the 2025 AAMS Community Impact Award, the Association of Air Medical Services announced Friday.
The AAMS Community Impact Award recognizes outstanding contribution to transport medicine which resulted in expanded access, increased health care equity, preserved or broadened services, improved medical transport solvency, strengthened business continuity, enhanced patient advocacy, or improved a foundational element of medical transport that gives hope for a brighter future.
“We’re appreciative of AAMS for first recognizing our company in this way,” said Anthony Cole, CEO, Enterprise Rescue. “We like to think of ourselves as a small fish in a big pond, so to have an international association hand-pick us out of several deserving nominees is a big honor for our company and our employees who pour their hearts into this business.”
Some notable 2024 Awardees for the honor include the American Ambulance Association, the International Association of Fire Chiefs, and the National Association of Emergency Medical Technicians.
The nomination will be recognized – and the winner announced – at AMTC25 in Omaha, Nebraska, on Tuesday, Oct. 28, as part of the Air Medical Transport Conference. Enterprise Rescue is nominated alongside LifeMed Alaska and Primary Care Flight Paramedic (PCFP) and Advanced Care Flight Paramedic (ACFP) Program.
About Enterprise Rescue, Inc.
Enterprise Rescue is an employee-owned, non-profit ambulance service operating 24/7. What started out as a volunteer service back in 1963 transitioned from what was then Enterprise Rescue Squad to now Enterprise Rescue, Inc., as of 1997. With just seven original community members operating out of a 1958 Pontiac Hearse, ERI has now blossomed into a leading ambulance service with more than 200 employees, with coverage spanning from its original roots in Coffee County, to operations now in Covington, Clarke and Monroe Counties.

