At his daily press conference, Gov. Andy Beshear addressed remarks by President Donald J. Trump. |
Kentucky Health News
As President Trump openly hoped for
“packed churches” on Easter Sunday, April 12, as a signal of a re-opened economy,
Gov. Andy Beshear announced further restrictions on Kentucky businesses to stop
the spread of the coronavirus.
Beshear said Tuesday that he would
order all non-life-sustaining business to close to in-person traffic on
Thursday, and even for those that sustain life, “We are going to mandate the
type of social distance that we have to see out there to protect our people.”
Beshear’s order, and those of most other
governors, runs against a line of thought among some business executives and
economists that social distancing and the restrictions it requires will cause irreparable
economic damage, and that restrictions need to be relaxed, perhaps by geography.
Health experts say it’s too early to
change course, but Trump adopted the line of thought in an interview Tuesday with
Fox News, saying he “would love to have the country opened up, and just raring
to go, by Easter. . . . You’ll have packed churches all over our country. I
think it would be a beautiful time. And it’s just about the timeline that I
think is right.”
He added, “Now, people are gonna
have to practice all of the social distancing . . . but we have to get our country
back to work.”
Governors have more public-health powers
than presidents to fight pandemics, but there has been tension and finger-pointing
between some states and the Trump administration about their roles and
performance. Beshear has steered clear of remarks about Trump, who is popular
in Kentucky, but no more.
Asked at his daily press conference
about Trump’s remarks, Beshear shook his head as he recounted Trump’s mention
of large crowds, and alluded to health experts’ fear that easing up too early could
lead to a resurgence of the covid-19 disease caused by the virus.
“We’ve got to be ready to do what it
takes to defeat the coronavirus on the very first try,” Beshear said. “My son Will
was supposed to be baptized in his church this Easter . . . He said, ‘Dad if it
helps other people I can wait.’ All of us have to be ready to wait however long
it takes, if it helps other people.”
Earlier in the press conference, Beshear
noted that Monday had seen 100 deaths from covid-19 in the U.S., a record, and
that Tuesday saw a record number of new cases in Kentucky, 39, for a total of 163.
“We are just seeing the escalation of this virus,” he said, “and to suggest that
there is a short duration we can almost promise people is not something we
should be doing.”
As Beshear spoke, Trump was holding
his own daily press conference, and taking a softer line than he had earlier in
the day. It followed a meeting with experts including Dr. Anthony Fauci,
director of the National Institute for Allergies and Infectious Diseases.
“Our decision will be based on hard
data and facts,” he said. Asked what metrics he would apply, he said, “I will
be guided very much by Doctor Fauci” and other professionals.
Fauci
said, “You could look at a date but you want to be very flexible. . . . The country
is a big country, and there are areas of the country … that we really need to
know more about.”
One of
those is Kentucky, where testing for covid-19 is not widespread because the state
is short of the personal protective equipment that is needed by people who administer
the tests.
Alluding
to an earlier Trump remark, that states should work to find such supplies, Beshear
said Kentucky was outbid for one order by the Federal Emergency Management
Agency.
“An order that we had the other
day, FEMA came in and bought it, all, out from under us,” Beshear said. “It is
a challenge that the federal governments says, ‘States, you need to go out and
find your supply chain,’ and then the federal government ends up buying from
that supply chain.”
FEMA
Administrator Pete Gaynor said Tuesday morning that the agency was invoking the
Defense Production Act to allocate testing kits and masks, but at his press conference,
Trump said the use of the law wasn’t needed. He has been wary of using the law,
which some see as a nationalization of private industry.
Later, FEMA
spokeswoman Lizzie Litzow said, “At the last minute we were able to procure the
test kits from the private market without evoking the DPA.” But she said use of
it for masks was “still being worked through.”
Personal
protective equipment is also needed at hospitals, which fear being overwhelmed by
covid-19 cases. Governors and health experts say social distancing and other restrictions
are need to “flatten the curve” of the outbreak so the health-care system can
handle it.
“We’ve got
to be ready,” Beshear said. “These are the lives of our parents and our
grandparents. This is a significant outbreak that we’re having, and we’re all
sacrificing so much.” He noted the job and business losses being suffered by the
restrictions he and other governors have imposed.
“We’re putting the lives of people
ahead of our economy,” Beshear said. “We’re putting the lives of our people
first. We’re putting the lives of people ahead of our financial security . . . After
what we’ve asked you to do, let’s make sure we defeat this virus, and we don’t
just set a random number of days, and then stop what we’re doing, and it
results in a threat to the life of so many Kentuckians.”
Dr. Steven Stack, the state health commissioner, said on KET Monday night, "The states have to solve this, and we are gonna try to solve it. Kentuckians need to anticipate that it would be longer than those two weeks but I wouldn’t speculate how long."
Dr. Steven Stack, the state health commissioner, said on KET Monday night, "The states have to solve this, and we are gonna try to solve it. Kentuckians need to anticipate that it would be longer than those two weeks but I wouldn’t speculate how long."
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