Alexis Plaski, recipient of the 2023 – 2024 Wisconsin EMS Association Scholarship.
February 12, 2024

Mid-State student awarded $1,000 Wisconsin EMS Association Scholarship

February 12, 2024

Mid-State Technical College student Alexis Plaski has been chosen as the sole recipient of the 2023 – 2024 Academic Year Annual Scholarship of $1,000 by the Wisconsin EMS Association (WEMSA). Plaski was presented with the award at the WEMSA 2024 state conference held Jan. 30 – Feb. 2 in Green Bay.

Mid-State faculty and staff with Alexis Plaski at the Wisconsin EMS Association (WEMSA) 2024 state conference held Jan. 30 – Feb. 2 in Green Bay. From left: Ryan Huser, Paramedic Technician instructor and program director; Dr. James DuCanto, Mid-State EMS medical director; Alexis Plaski, Paramedic Technician student; and Rick Anderson, associate dean of the School of Public Safety.
Mid-State faculty and staff with Alexis Plaski at the Wisconsin EMS Association (WEMSA) 2024 state conference held Jan. 30 – Feb. 2 in Green Bay. From left: Ryan Huser, Paramedic Technician instructor and program director; Dr. James DuCanto, Mid-State EMS medical director; Alexis Plaski, Paramedic Technician student; and Rick Anderson, associate dean of the School of Public Safety.

WEMSA’s scholarship was made possible as part of a five-year commitment from the Schoenleber Foundation, Inc., to provide an annual scholarship of $1,000 to students enrolled in approved EMS programs in Wisconsin. WEMSA also evaluates applicants based on their résumé, letter of recommendation and statement about how they would benefit from the scholarship. 

Plaski is a Paramedic Technician student at Mid-State with plans to graduate this May. She also works for the Amherst Fire District as both a Firefighter and Advanced EMT and at Aurora Medical Center in Oshkosh in the emergency department. Her path in EMS began with Mid-State’s Emergency Medical Responder course, completed during her junior year of high school. After high school she completed Emergency Medical Technician training, followed a few years later with Advanced EMT certification. 

“I am extremely thankful and grateful to the WEMSA Foundation for the generous scholarship that I have been awarded to help me achieve my long-term goals and aspirations,” said Plaski, whose long-term goals include working as a firefighter/paramedic for her hometown in Amherst and obtaining her critical care endorsement. “I am thankful for my community for their continuous support over the years, for not only me, but for all who continue to serve the community.”

“I have been very impressed with Lexie’s vision and drive toward what she wants out of life,” said Rick Anderson, Associate Dean of the School of Public Safety at Mid-State. “To watch her advance her training in both fire and EMS has been inspiring, and I hope that other young women look at her role-modeling and decide to follow a similar path. I am proud of her efforts and can’t wait to see what her future chapters bring to the community she serves.”

The Wisconsin EMS Association Foundation is a 501c3 charitable organization which seeks to address the needs, and provide the means, to further the opportunities for the education and training of emergency medical services personnel; and to improve the health and well-being of communities through education to have a greater awareness of issues involving emergency medicine.

Starting the 2024 – 2025 academic year, the WEMSA Foundation will be offering additional scholarships thanks to a partnership and establishment of the Lake Mills EMS Legacy Scholarship Program.

Learn more about Mid-State’s fire and EMS programs at mstc.edu/programs.