Hurricane Katrina revealed cracks in the levees and the novel coronavirus has uncovered cracks in our public health infrastructure and national emergency management system. Tragically, in both emergencies, inadequate national response, coordinated by the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA), have been hallmarks. FEMA’s primary purpose is to coordinate response to disasters that overwhelm local and state resources. A state’s governor must declare a state of emergency and formally make a request to the U.S. president that FEMA and the federal government respond to the disaster. Nearly every U.S. governor representing states and territories and the mayor of the District of Columbia have declared a state of emergency related to novel coronavirus.
Where is the U.S. Director of FEMA? Where is the Director of Homeland Security? What is the federal plan for response to local and state authorities being overwhelmed by novel coronavirus?
Do you remember the chaos during the aftermath of Hurricane Katrina, where state troopers prevented citizens of New Orleans from crossing the bridge to a nearby parish in the name of safety and protecting that community? Fast forward to March 26, 2020 with Governors of Rhode Island, Kentucky, Florida and New Mexico having placed restrictions on travelers from Louisiana, New York, Colorado and other states requiring self-quarantines for 14 days and those persons who fail to self-quarantine facing the possibility of forced isolation or quarantine.
What says FEMA and Department of Homeland Security? Where are the novel coronavirus testing kits to enable data and reason to drive decision making? What’s the national plan for mass production of Personal Protection Equipment (PPE)? What’s the national plan for ramping up ventilator production?
I implore Chief Supply Chain officers within federal, state and local agencies, health systems and hospitals across the U.S. to maintain enactment of Affirmative Action guidelines.
In closing, I ask the question from Katrina to Coronavirus what have we learned?
Sincerely,