Miami Herald (Sunday)

White House COVID report contradict­s DeSantis: Is that why he suppressed it?

A White House Coronaviru­s Task Force report about the state of the pandemic in Florida urges public health measures that Gov. Ron DeSantis has publicly assailed for months as ineffectiv­e.

- BY KIRBY WILSON Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

A White House Coronaviru­s Task Force report about the state of the pandemic in Florida made public Saturday urges state leaders to take immediate action to slow the virus’ spread.

Officials should close or severely limit indoor dining, limit capacity at bars and issue stronger policies around mask wearing, the report states.

Those are the same public health measures that Gov. Ron DeSantis has publicly assailed for months as ineffectiv­e. While he was making the case for no new business restrictio­ns, DeSantis’ office refused to publicize reports from the task force that recommende­d a more robust public response.

The Dec. 6 report, which was obtained by the Center for Public Integrity, is one in a series of weekly reports that the governor’s office has refused to regularly provide to news organizati­ons. The Miami Herald has not received any of these reports from the governor’s office.

Earlier this week, the Orlando Sentinel and South Florida Sun Sentinel sued the governor’s office seeking release of the reports. The governor’s office had not released any of the weekly reports issued during the month of November, the suit alleged.

The White House task force, which consists of top federal health officials and is led by Vice President Mike Pence, contradict­ed DeSantis’ public messaging in a number of ways in its Dec. 6 report. The Republican governor has ruled out any further business restrictio­ns aimed at curbing the spread of the virus, arguing such measures do not work and harm the economy.

But the task force made the case that such restrictio­ns do slow the spread, and recommende­d that the state step up its policy response to the virus.

“Despite the severity of this surge and the threat to the hospital systems, many state and local government­s are not implementi­ng the same mitigation policies that stemmed the tide of the summer surge; that must happen now,” the federal report reads.

During Florida’s summer surge, DeSantis’ administra­tion prohibited drinking at bars but did not go as far as some states are now going to discourage public gatherings. DeSantis often says that Florida’s hospitals weren’t overwhelme­d even during the worst of the summer outbreak, but some facilities faced staffing shortages as admissions surged.

When asked whether DeSantis’ office was refusing to issue the reports because they contradict­ed the state’s top official, the governor’s office did not respond.

The task force’s Dec. 6 report notes that, compared to other states, Florida appears to have fewer cases than some of its peers — many of which have implemente­d economic restrictio­ns. The Sunshine State had the 41st most new cases per 100,000 residents, and just the 33rd highest rate of positive cases in the country as of the date of the report.

However, the report cautioned that “rankings are almost irrelevant as the entire country is surging.”

Florida reported 10,577 new cases on Saturday. This is just one day after reporting 11,699 new cases on Friday — the most since the state’s summer viral surge.

DeSantis has noted several times in recent weeks that a number of private vaccines are hitting the market starting as soon as next week, providing hope for the country’s ultimate recovery from the pandemic. But the task force report cautions that it won’t be until “late spring” that enough Americans are vaccinated to substantia­lly lower the risk of viral spread.

Through the winter, when respirator­y diseases like the coronaviru­s thrive, a “significan­t behavior change of all Americans” will be needed to slow the virus’ spread, the White House report said. Anyone who gathered outside his or her home for Thanksgivi­ng should presume they are now infected, according to the report. People with pre-existing conditions and those over 65 should have groceries and medication­s delivered to their home. Masks should be worn at all times in public.

“Begin warning about any gathering during December holidays,” the report reads in bold text.

If DeSantis read the report, he is not modeling the behavior recommende­d. On Friday, he appeared with his family at a high school football game. He tweeted a picture of himself standing beside his wife, Casey, and with two of their children in front of a crowd of hundreds of spectators.

The vast majority of the people in the photo, including the governor, were maskless.

 ??  ?? Gov. Ron DeSantis
Gov. Ron DeSantis
 ?? MARK LENNIHAN AP ?? A pharmacist with a syringe at Mount Sinai Queens hospital in New York.
MARK LENNIHAN AP A pharmacist with a syringe at Mount Sinai Queens hospital in New York.

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