The Trump administration is giving every state the same number of respirators — regardless of population
With the federal stockpile for personal protective equipment dwindling during the COVID-19 pandemic, the Trump administration reportedly sent shipments to states in a third and "final push" before the private sector takes on the bulk of the effort.
But new details from the Department of Health and Human Services and the Federal Emergency Management Agency released by the House Oversight Committee show that the government did not appear to meet states' specific requests upon delivery. The first two rounds of shipments were based on census data from 2010, while the third round apparently wasn't adjusted for population at all.
Vermont and Texas, for example, which aren't remotely comparable in size, both received 120,900 N95 respirator masks. That's good news for Vermont, but not so much for Texas. To put in perspective, Vermont received 193 respirators for every 1,000 residents while Texas got five per 1,000. While equal distribution sounds nice in theory, it doesn't seem to make much sense in this case.
With the stockpile tapped out, states are relying on the private sector for addditional supplies.
New docs suggest a "final push" of PPE to states was sent without respect to population. For example, Vermont and Texas received the same number of N95 respitators in that tranche. pic.twitter.com/OoR0ZtXERS
— Kyle Cheney (@kyledcheney) April 8, 2020
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