Chicago Tribune - 04.04.2020

(Nandana) #1

Chicago Tribune | Section 1 | Saturday, April 4, 2020 5


NATION & WOR LD


CORONAVIRUS OUTBREAK

FORT LAUDERDALE,
Fla. — Passengers from an
ill-fated cruise were care-
fully freed from their cabins
and allowed to touch dry
land Friday for the first time
in weeks, following the re-
moval of 14 critically ill
people who were wheeled
off to Florida hospitals brac-
ing for an onslaught of
coronavirus patients.
The exodus from the
Zaandam and its sister ship

the Rotterdam could extend
into Saturday, officials said.
Floridians disembarked
first, followed by other pas-
sengers. Buses were taking
passengers who were show-
ing no symptoms after be-
ing screened and cleared by
third-party paramedics di-
rectly to the airport, es-
corted by deputies on
motorcycles.
Broward County Sheriff
Gregory Tony dispatched
more than 70 deputies to
disembark and transport
the passengers.
“It’s a lot of manpower.

But it’s worth it. We don’t
want to have people dying
on ships,” Tony said, adding
the vessels have been
turned away enough. It
“wasn’t some pirate ship.
These are our brothers and
sisters on this planet.”
As for those needing
medical care, Broward
Health officials said in a
statement some of the 10
patients taken to its hospi-
tal were in fair condition,
without specifying the
number. Three others were
taken to another local hos-
pital.

Before disembarking,
passengers received in-
structions to wear face
masks at all times when
traveling and go immedi-
ately into 14 days of self
quarantine when they ar-
rived home.
At least four buses
brought the first small
groups to Fort Lauderdale-
Hollywood International
Airport on Friday morning,
where they boarded two
planes waiting on the tar-
mac. The first planes left for
Toronto and Atlanta, offi-
cials said.

A person on a stretcher is removed from Carnival’s Holland
America cruise ship Zaandam in Fort Lauderdale, Florida.


LYNNE SLADKY/AP

Florida removing passengers off cruise ship


By Kelli Kennedy
and Wilfredo Lee
Associated Press

WASHINGTON — Al-
ready facing growing anger
and worry from governors
over federal assistance to
fight the coronavirus out-
break, the Trump adminis-
tration on Friday abruptly
changed its description of
the Strategic National
Stockpile and put forward a
narrower vision of the role
the federal government’s
repository of life-saving
medicines and equipment
should play in supplying
states’ needs.
The change conforms
with President Donald
Trump’s insistence that the
stockpile is only a short-
term backup for states, not a
commitment to ensure sup-
plies get quickly to those
who need them most dur-
ing an emergency. It’s the
latest front in a concerted
White House effort to try to
put the onus for battling the
crisis on the states, with
Washington meant to play
more of a supporting role.
The alteration of the
language describing the
stockpile was reflected on
government websites on
Friday, a day after Jared
Kushner, Trump’s son-in-
law and White House sen-
ior adviser who has taken a
larger role in the co-
ronavirus response, offered
a new argument about the
supplies.
After saying states
should use their own stock-
piles first, Kushner on
Thursday said, “And the
notion of the federal stock-
pile was it’s supposed to be
our stockpile. It’s not sup-
posed to be states’ stock-


piles that they then use.”
Trump on Friday touted
the number of supplies be-
ing sent to the states, in-
cluding 8.1 million masks to
New York. The president
also directed FEMA to pre-
vent export of the N
masks under the Defense
Production Act. And the
Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention issued new
guidance for Americans to
wear masks in crowded
areas, particularly in hot
spots. Trump immediately
said that he would not
personally follow the rec-
ommendation.
The number of people
infected in the U.S. ex-
ceeded 270,000 and the

death toll climbed past
7,000, with New York state
alone accounting for more
than 2,900 dead, an in-
crease of over 560 in just
one day, according to a tally
by Johns Hopkins Uni-
versity. More than 9,
people in the United States
have recovered.
Worldwide, confirmed
infections neared 1.1 million
and deaths topped 58,000.
Until Friday, the federal
Health and Human Serv-
ices website had a markedly
different approach to the
stockpile. The “Strategic
National Stockpile is the
nation’s largest supply of
life-saving pharmaceuticals
and medical supplies for

use in a public health emer-
gency severe enough to
cause local supplies to run
out,” the website used to
say, according to an
archived search.
“When state, local, tribal,
and territorial responders
request federal assistance
to support their response
efforts, the stockpile en-
sures that the right medi-
cines and supplies get to
those who need them most
during an emergency,” the
website had said.
But, according to data,
the description changed
Friday morning: “The Stra-
tegic National Stockpile’s
role is to supplement state
and local supplies during

public health emergencies.
Many states have products
stockpiled, as well. The
supplies, medicines, and
devices for life-saving care
contained in the stockpile
can be used as a short-term
stopgap buffer when the
immediate supply of ade-
quate amounts of these
materials may not be im-
mediately available.”
Officials at the agency
said the change had been in
the works for weeks, down-
playing any connection to
Kushner’s comments.
Trump has long insisted
that the primary responsi-
bility rests with the states in
managing the pandemic.
He has resisted calls to issue

a national stay-at-home or-
der and said that he didn’t
want to overly use the
Defense Production Act,
which allows him to mobili-
ze private companies for
the effort, because he be-
lieved the states should take
the lead in obtaining sup-
plies.
“I leave it up to the
governors,” Trump said Fri-
day about whether every
state should have a stay-at-
home order. “I like that
from the standpoint of gov-
erning.”
But in statehouses across
the nation, there has been
increasing frustration at the
lack of assistance from
Washington.
In New York, Gov. An-
drew Cuomo on Friday
announced one of the most
aggressive steps yet in the
U.S. to relieve severe short-
ages of equipment needed
to fight the scourge, saying
he will use his authority to
seize ventilators and pro-
tective gear from private
hospitals and companies
that aren’t using them.
Meanwhile, the White
House on Friday stepped
up precautions to protect
the president and vice pres-
ident from contracting the
new coronavirus. Anyone
who is expected to be in
“close proximity” to Trump
or Vice President Mike
Pence will be given a new,
quick COVID-19 test “to
evaluate for pre-symptom-
atic or asymptomatic
carriers status to limit inad-
vertent transmission,” ac-
cording to White House
spokesman Judd Deere.
The president did not
seem aware the new policy
had been put into place.
“You know what? I like it.
Let’s test these guys,” he
said in response to a ques-
tion about the policy. “Lis-
ten: They gave us millions
of jobs. If anybody wants to
be tested, we’ll test them.”

Trump narrows who gets stockpile


Updated definition


to states aligns with


Kushner statement


By Jonathan Lemire,
Amanda Seitz
and Jill Colvin

Associated Press


President Trump has said that primary responsibility rests with states in how they manage the coronavirus pandemic.

ALEX BRANDON/AP

WASHINGTON — Sen-
ate Majority Leader Mitch
McConnell said Friday that
health care must be at the
“top of the list” in the next
coronavirus rescue pack-
age.
McConnell, R-Ky., said
Congress should focus on
correcting any short-
comings in the just-passed
$2.2 trillion aid measure
and rely on health care
experts for solutions to
“wipe out” the virus.
“There will be a next
measure,” he said about
what would be the fourth
coronavirus aid bill from
Congress.
He said the next package
“should be more a targeted
response to what we got
wrong and what we didn’t
do enough for — and at the
top of the list there would
have to be the health care
part of it.”
McConnell’s remarks,
alongside comments Fri-
day from House Speaker
Nancy Pelosi, signal a po-
tential thaw after days of
political sniping and prom-


ise a new opportunity for
Congress to work in a
bipartisan way to fight the
pandemic gripping the na-
tion.
Pelosi, D-Calif., said Fri-
day that the next aid bill
should build on the biparti-
san relief bills that Con-
gress has passed so far
rather than include
broader Democratic
agenda items, such as infra-
structure and rural broad-
band access.
That’s a noteworthy piv-
ot for Pelosi, who earlier
has pressed goals such as a
large public works measure
and the restoration of a
deduction for state and
local tax payments.
“While I’m very much in
favor of doing some things
we need to do to meet the
needs — clean water, more
broadband, the rest of that
— that may have to be for a
bill beyond that right now,”
she said during an appear-
ance on CNBC.
McConnell acknowl-
edged that he and Pelosi
have “a little different point
of view” about the timing of
the next package, as the
congressional leaders have
jousted in separate televi-

sion and media appear-
ances all week.
McConnell maintained
he is “not in favor of
rushing” into the next
phase until they take stock
of how the just-passed bill
is working and what cor-
rections are needed.
But the focus on health
care has potential broad
appeal as the crisis afflicts
communities of all sizes
and in all corners of the
country, with sick patients
seeking treatment at in-
creasingly overrun hospi-
tals and emergency rooms.
“We’ve got to wipe this
out and we’ve got to wipe it
out in warp speed,” he said.
“And so I would put that at
the top of the list of places
we need to look and see
what could we have done
better in the previous bill,
the $2.2 trillion.”
He added: “We can’t
sustain economically this
happening again. We’ve got
to solve the health part of it,
which means not only
treatment but vaccines.”
The leaders’ remarks
came as fresh evidence
arrived of the gravity of the
economic crisis caused by
the outbreak. The latest

batch of unemployment fig-
ures showed that a record,
almost decade-long streak
of U.S. job growth ended last
month.
In a hallway conversa-
tion with a small group of
reporters, Pelosi said a $
billion program to help keep
small businesses afloat
should be extended, as well
as unemployment insur-
ance for the jobless and a

direct payment to most
Americans.
“Let’s do the same bill we
just did, make some
changes to make it current
and correct some of the
things that we’d like to see,”
Pelosi said. She also would
like more generous aid for
state and local governments
facing budget crises be-
cause of plummeting sales
and income tax revenues

and higher costs for co-
ronavirus response and
safety net programs.
Pelosi’s shift followed
criticism by Republicans
that she was seeking to take
advantage of the crisis to
press ambitious Democratic
agenda items that couldn’t
pass on their own. Mc-
Connell made it clear that
Republicans wouldn’t agree
to such add-ons.

Health care tops list for next


virus aid bill, McConnell says


By Lisa Mascaro
and Andrew Taylor

Associated Press


Sen. Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., said the next bill should correct any shortcomings in the $2.
trillion aid law. Rep. Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., floated aid for state and local governments.

EVAN VUCCI/AP
Free download pdf