Sen. Schumer Unveils Two-Pronged Plan to Ramp Up Testing
Availability and Domestic PPE Production During Visit to Lowville


November 23, 2020   01:00 p.m.
    Press Release from Senator Schumer's Office:

    SCHUMER: AS A SECOND COVID WAVE HITS NEW YORK, STATE
    CANNOT RISK INADEQUATE FREE TESTING AND A REPEAT OF
    DESPERATELY LOW STOCKS OF MASKS ACROSS NY; SITUATION MUST
    BE ADDRESSED NOW TO AVOID MAJOR CONSEQUENCES FOR NORTH
    COUNTRY RESIDENTS & HEALTH CARE WORKERS; STANDING WITH
    LEWIS COUNTY OFFICIALS, SCHUMER PUSHES TWO-PRONGED PLAN
    TO HELP NEW YORKERS, DOCS, NURSES, HOSPITALS, AND PROVIDERS
    GET INFLUX OF TESTING, MASKS, & OTHER PPE

    Schumer Says We Must Learn From The First Months Of The Pandemic Where
    Testing & PPE Were Scarce, & Ensure North Country’s Residents & Frontline
    Health Care Workers Have Sufficient Access To Free Rapid Testing, N-95
    Masks, And Other PPE

    Using All Possible Federal Resources, Schumer’s Plan 1) Utilize $9 Billion In
    Federal Testing Dollars HHS Is Holding Onto, & 2) Would Provide $11 Billion
    To Produce and Expand Manufacturing Capacity for Critical PPE & Get
    Desperately Needed Masks To North Country  

    Schumer: As North Country Faces Second Round Of Testing & PPE Battle,
    Feds Need To Give Them Their Armor

    A consistent champion for rural healthcare, frontline health care workers, and
    small businesses during the pandemic, Senate Democratic Leader Charles E.
    Schumer, standing at the Lewis County Office Building, unveiled his two-pronged
    plan to ramp up testing availability and domestic production of PPE, including N-
    95 masks, with the help of Upstate New York’s small businesses. First, Schumer
    demanded that the department of Health and Human Services release the $9
    billion for testing they are sitting on that Schumer secured for a national,
    coordinated, and robust testing regime. Second, Schumer revealed the Protect
    Our Heroes Act of 2020, which provides $11 billion for the Strategic National
    Stockpile (SNS) to purchase critical PPE like N-95 masks and to support small
    businesses in expanding domestic production of critical PPE. Specifically, the
    legislation provides $1 billion in federal, Small Business Administration (SBA)
    grants for small businesses to retool domestic facilities to produce critical PPE
    over the next two years. Schumer also said he intends to continue fighting for
    rural communities, like Lewis County, across Upstate New York as the possibility
    of a second wave emerges and as a COVID relief deal continues to be
    negotiated.

    “With flu season upon us and a resurgence of COVID in New York, in order to
    keep everyone safe, we’re going to need rapid tests and PPE, and we’re going to
    need them quickly,” said Senator Schumer. “Right now, North Country residents
    have some free testing available to them and health care workers have a little bit
    of PPE stored, but there are major concerns about whether the community is
    equipped to get through the emerging second wave of the pandemic. We’re
    going to use all the federal resources possible to ramp up free testing and PPE
    production for the North Country, ensuring peace of mind and some semblance
    of stability to New Yorkers who have already endured a tumultuous year.”

    Schumer added, “We all remember the early days of the crisis, when getting
    COVID test results back took days if you could even get one, and when health
    care professionals in some parts of the country were forced to jury-rig masks and
    gloves from spare clothing and bits of string. The recent surge in cases might
    bring us all back to, or beyond, the peak levels we saw earlier this year, which is
    why we must do everything in our power to avoid a repeat of the widespread
    testing and PPE shortages, particularly rapid testing and N-95 masks.”

    Schumer negotiated $9 billion for a national testing regime into the CARES Act,
    which HHS has yet to allocate. The funding would provide millions of rapid test
    kits and hundreds of rapid testing machines across the U.S., boosting the ability
    of communities, especially rural ones like Lewis, to combat the emerging second
    wave of COVID-19. The senator said releasing the funding was a high priority,
    with testing and contact tracing being important tools to containing the virus.

    Furthermore, the senator threw his support behind the Protect Our Heroes Act of
    2020, which, in addition to providing $1 billion for small businesses, authorizes
    $10 billion for the SNS to purchase critical PPE, including N-95 masks, nitrile
    gloves, gowns, face shields, surgical masks, and more. This investment will
    provide certainty to domestic manufacturers that there will be a market when they
    scale up their production. The plan also uses the Defense Production Act (DPA)
    as well as authorities in the Federal Emergency Management Act (FEMA) and
    the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), to spur the development,
    investment, and production of critical PPE, addressing requests from governors.

    Finally, the bill requires the federal government to release reports regularly on
    the supplies needed to fight COVID-19 and provide direction for bolstering
    domestic manufacturing to provide those supplies. It also mandates the
    Government Accountability Office (GAO) provide recommendations on how the
    President may use existing authorities to purchase a sufficient supply of PPE to
    combat this virus.

    Specifically, the Protect Our Heroes Act will:

  • Provide $10 billion in funding for the Strategic National Stockpile (SNS) to
    purchase large quantities of designated PPE, including N-95 masks, gloves,
    gowns, face shields, and surgical masks.
  • Allows the Defense Production Act (DPA) and other existing authorities to
    expand the industrial capacity of domestic PPE production, while requiring
    the Comptroller General of the United States to develop recommendations
    on further using these authorities.
  • Create a $1 billion grant program to help small businesses retool domestic
    facilities to produce critical PPE, with priority given to minority-owned and
    other underserved small businesses as well as those owned by service
    disabled veterans with considerations for other veteran-owned small
    businesses. This proposal also prioritizes small businesses that receive
    grants through this program when reviewing purchasing order decisions for
    the SNS.
  • Require the federal government to release regular reports on the critical
    supplies needed to address the COVID-19 pandemic, including an
    assessment of the SNS and other stockpiles, direction for bolstering
    domestic manufacturing to provide critical supplies, plans to meet
    forecasted needs to combat the virus, a review of the PPE supply chain,
    and a detailed explanations of the authorities used under the DPA and other
    authorities to purchase PPE for the SNS.
  • Mandate an annual Government Accountability Office report on the country’
    s access to the medial supplies needed to respond to this and future
    pandemics, as well as the health of the U.S. supply chain.

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