Bring Structure and Accountability to Controlled Substances Management with Vector Check It
Thursday, June 11 at 11 a.m. PT
As of March 2026, the DEA’s final EMS ruling under the Protecting Patient Access to Emergency Medications Act (PPAEMA) establishes more defined expectations for how Fire and EMS agencies manage Schedule II controlled substances.
For many departments, this means shifting from informal processes to more consistent, well-documented workflows across stations, shifts, and vehicles.
In this webinar on June 11, we will break down what these updated expectations mean for your agency and show how Vector Check It helps improve visibility, consistency, and accountability in controlled substances management. From daily narcotics checks to audit-ready reporting, learn how to strengthen your approach while supporting safe, efficient operations.
During this presentation, you’ll learn how to:
- Understand the key updates in the DEA’s final EMS rule and how they impact daily operations
- Standardize controlled substances management from procurement through usage or disposal
- Streamline narcotics tracking, restocking, and documentation workflows with the mobile app
- Strengthen oversight with role-based permissions, alerts, and secure verification methods
- Gain better insight into controlled substances activity with detailed reporting and audit trails
Can’t Make It Live?
- Register anyway and we’ll send you the recording!
Presenters

Johnny Roberson, Solutions Engineer
Johnny Roberson served as a firefighter in Tennessee for many years and retired in 2012. During his time, Johnny served in multiple roles, including technical teams and training, and maintained his license as a NREMT. He also served as a Deputy Director of Emergency Management for 13 years. Johnny has worked for Vector Solutions as a Solutions Engineer since 2017.

Robbi King, Director, Solutions Engineer
Robbi King spent 27 years in public safety, including 13 years with Camden County, GA, Fire Rescue where he reached the rank of Assistant Chief. He also served more than 13 years as deputy coroner at the Camden County Coroner’s Office. As assistant chief in Camden County, King helped the agency with firefighting support, management of logistics, and administration of Vector Solutions’ training management platform. He now serves as a solutions engineer with Vector Solutions.