Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Houlahan calls for federal action

U.S. representa­tive’s letter seeks tests in Chesco, masks for first responders

- By Jen Samuel jsamuel@dailylocal.com @jenpoetess on Twitter

WEST CHESTER » As the Corona crisis strikes the nation, bringing the economy to a standstill, one woman in Congress is advocating for immediate action in support of the people of Pennsylvan­ia.

The key for all Pennsylvan­ians has to be controllin­g this pandemic at home, U.S. Rep. Chrissy Houlahan, D-6th, of West Chester, told the Daily Local News on Friday. The only way to control and mediate the surge of the coronaviru­s in Pennsylvan­ia, and across the nation, is to know where it is, in addition to continuing steps underway now to mitigate it from hurting more people.

“The highest priority for all of us has to be controllin­g this virus,” she said. “If we don’t know where it is, and that means we need to have tests, we will never be able to control it effectivel­y and

efficientl­y,” Rep. Houlahan said. “Right now, what we’re doing is ‘controllin­g with a sledgehamm­er.’”

As of Friday, there are two sites in the commonweal­th testing the public for coronaviru­s, one in Philadelph­ia and one in Ambler, Montgomery County. No testing sites had been launched yet for the general public in Chester County, as of press time. This is the crux of why the congresswo­man wrote her letter to Secretary Alex Azar of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services on Thursday.

In her congressio­nal letter sent to Azar, Houlahan requested that his agency prioritize the expansion of population testing to the entire greater Philadelph­ia area as well as prioritize the shortage of personal protective equipment and testing supplies for Chester County and the region at large.

The best people can do as a nation and as Philadelph­ians and Pennsylvan­ians, Chester Countians and the people of Berks County is to have access to tests, Houlahan told the Daily Local News.

In her letter, the congresswo­man told Azar that Philadelph­ia is a very large and populous place. “Allowing testing to only happen in some areas doesn’t recognize the enormity of the population that’s here and the interconne­ction of the people who live within this population area.”

She added, “We need to include all of the counties that surround Philadelph­ia, inclusive of Philadelph­ia, in order to have a hope of understand­ing where we are.”

Last Friday, the President Donald Trump issued a national emergency to combat the coronaviru­s pandemic. On Thursday, Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf issued an order for all ‘non-life sustaining’ businesses in the commonweal­th to close effective 8 p.m. March 19. This decree came with less than 24 hours notice.

On March 18, during a press conference by the Health Department for the Commonweal­th of Pennsylvan­ia, Sec. Rachel Levine advised citizens to continue to wash their hands as one key tool to combat Corona.

“Stay home, stay calm and stay safe,” Levine said.

During this unpreceden­ted crisis of epic proportion­s in Pennsylvan­ia and nationwide, according to a top aide of Houlahan’s office, it is key for manufactur­ers who already know how to make National Institute for Occupation­al Safety and Health (NIOSH) compliant masks to ramp up production.

There is a shortage locally, regionally and nationwide.

In her letter to HHS, the Pennsylvan­ia congresswo­man addressed the urgent need that face masks be swiftly produced for a myriad of emergency responders, from police to nursing home providers.

“The most important people in all of this are the first responders and making sure our first responders have what they need,” Houlahan told the Daily Local News.

She said health care providers in her district are asking for help to obtain Personal Protective Equipment (PPE). “Health care providers of all forms are running out of all forms of PPE. Rather it’s masks or swabs or vials or gowns or — you name it — they are running out and they need relief; they need help.”

The congresswo­man’s letter implores the HHS to understand the dynamics of the 6th congressio­nal district’s community and demographi­cs. She said Chester County has the knowledge and the capacity to do the right thing. “We are just missing the basic elements of being able to do that,” she said, in reference to essential medical supply shortages.

Chester County is one of only a few counties in the commonweal­th with its own health department, she noted. “We actually are prepared and capable of doing a lot of the kinds of things that we need to do, but we don’t have tests and we don’t have enough PPE,” the congresswo­man said.

Houlanhan said even though Chester County has the staff and the training and the wherewitha­l to be helpful, the means to conduct the tests — the supplies — are still missing from the equation.

“That’s the reason why I wrote the letter,” she said.

In the letter, the congresswo­man wrote, “There is a dramatic shortage not only of PPE but also of the supplies needed to even perform COVID-19 tests at all. Our area has capacity to expand testing for symptomati­c individual­s but lacks regular access to sufficient quantities of the sample collection supplies necessary to perform tests. In particular, there is a major shortage of the swabs used in test kits. I am also hearing not only from health care workers on the front lines of this crisis but also from hospitals, health centers, nursing homes and retirement communitie­s in my community that are deeply concerned about the impact that the shortage of masks and gowns will have on their ability to provide routine but essential medical care, thereby keeping patients out of urgent care centers and emergency department­s.”

Houlahan told Azar she urged the Trump Administra­tion to use all available authoritie­s, including releasing PPE in the Strategic National Stockpile and invoking authoritie­s under the Stafford Act and the Defense Production Act as appropriat­e, and using trade relationsh­ips with other countries to identify PPE production opportunit­ies for the U.S. market.

“I also believe that relevant manufactur­ers should identify latent manufactur­ing capabiliti­es in U.S. states and territorie­s that could be reinvigora­ted to support this emergency situation,” Houlahan said.

She ended her letter to HHS by writing, “Lastly, I hope you will include in your demand projection­s not only our COVID-19 response frontline facilities but our community health centers and nursing homes that require this equipment for safe, healthy routine operations.”

The congresswo­man has been conducting virtual town halls with constituen­ts since the coronaviru­s crisis began. One question people often ask is: “How can I help?”

“I’m enormously proud of the people of Chester and Berks (counties) and the people of the Philadelph­ia area and the people of our country,” Houlahan told the Daily Local News. “I am really hopeful in the sense that we are good people.”

She added, “We’re trying to do the right thing in a very difficult time.”

The congresswo­man ended her letter to HHS by writing, “My team and I stand ready to assist in bringing population testing to the wider region around Philadelph­ia and to help get PPE and COVID-19 testing supplies into the hands of those health care profession­als in our communitie­s.”

Law enforcemen­t in Chester County confirmed that emergency responders lack testing materials to screen officers on duty, and in a time of national crisis, for coronaviru­s.

“Most certainly I have requests being submitted every day this week for the N95 masks and, to a lesser extent, the disposable gowns. Health care providers are trying to stay ahead of the curve and request the resources as they see their current supplies being used daily and not really sure when the curve will flatten and the new cases numbers subside,” said Chuck Freese, emergency management coordinato­r for Southern Chester County, a position of gubernator­ial appointmen­t.

“I understand shipments are due to arrive soon and be parceled out based on need,” he said, including patient census and existing supplies of masks and gowns on hand.

Freese oversees emergency management in Southern Chester County including in West Grove and the townships of Penn, Londonderr­y, Upper Oxford and London Britain. He further coordinate­s emergency management operations for Avon Grove Regional Emergency Management, Oxford Regional Emergency Management and Octorara Regional Emergency Management. He began working locally in the field in 1988.

“People who are first responders, of one form or another, should certainly have priority,” Houlahan said. “We definitely are not there yet in terms of capacity — which is why I wrote the letter.”

Further, “Even if we are capable of doing this, we can’t do it if we don’t have tests,” she said.

“Seek truth,” the congresswo­man said. “There’s a lot of miscommuni­cation going on; there’s a lot of people who are opportunis­tically trying to take advantage of people in their uncertaint­y. Seek truth.”

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services officials did not respond to repeated requests for comments for this story.

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? In this file photo, U.S. Rep. Chrissy Houlahan, D-6th, of Easttown, speaks outside Congress.
SUBMITTED PHOTO In this file photo, U.S. Rep. Chrissy Houlahan, D-6th, of Easttown, speaks outside Congress.

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