Miami Herald

Finally, a POTUS with a virus plan

- This editorial originally appeared in the Los Angeles Times.

If there is a single day that marks the beginning of the COVID-19 pandemic in the United States, it would be Jan. 21, 2020, when the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that it had confirmed the first case of the novel coronaviru­s on American soil.

The following day, President Trump, who was attending the World Economic Forum in Davos, Switzerlan­d, brushed off the threat from the then-unnamed virus with the type of willful carelessne­ss that defined his government’s approach to the pandemic that would soon rear its ugly head.

“It’s one person coming in from China,” he told CNBC. “We have it under control. It’s going to be just fine.”

Needless to say, it wasn’t fine. Even then the virus was stealthily spreading throughout the country. Nor did the United States have the coronaviru­s under any sort of control.

As it turned out, Trump didn’t even have a plan for how to get there, leaving it to the states to figure out what to do.

Instead, he pinned his and the nation’s fortunes on getting COVID-19 vaccines developed quickly, which the administra­tion helped to make happen.

It was not a winning strategy. In the first year of the pandemic, the United States led the world in COVID-19 infection and death. More than 400,000 dead from the virus, countless jobs lost and futures derailed.

But there’s hope that the second year of the pandemic will be less deadly and destructiv­e. At long last, we have a president with an actual plan to tap the knowledge and resources of the nation for a comprehens­ive response the likes of which we could have used long ago.

On the anniversar­y of the nation’s first confirmed case, President Biden released a 200-page document outlining a host of steps he plans to take immediatel­y as he seeks to fulfill his promise to guide the nation out of the pandemic and to vaccinate 100 million people in his first 100 days.

There is nothing new or revolution­ary in the plan, just sensible, science-based policy.

Experts had long advocated for many if not most of the measures, such as expanding and supporting rapid testing, using the Defense Production Act to force manufactur­ers to gin up more protective gear and other supplies, and mandating face coverings.

It’s maddening to think how many people might have been saved from serious illness or death

if even half the steps in this plan had been taken last year.

The first order of business, however, is getting a handle on why there isn’t more vaccine being shipped to states.

The United States invested many billions of dollars into developing and pre-purchasing doses even before they were proved to be effective. But supply has been unreliable.

[On Monday, White House Press Secretary Jennifer Psaki pointed he finger at Gov. Ron DeSantis for Florida’s problems.

“Because we’re data-first here, facts-first here, they’ve only distribute­d about 50 percent of the vaccines that they have been given in Florida, so clearly they have a good deal of the vaccine,” she said.]

Biden’s COVID coordinato­r, Jeff Zients, laid the chaos at the feet of the last administra­tion. “What we’re inheriting from the Trump administra­tion is so much worse than we could have imagined,” he said.

Given what we do know, that is not a surprise.

But it will be up to President Biden’s team to fix that — and fast.

 ?? JOE RAEDLE Getty Images ?? President Joe Biden seeks to have 100 million people vaccinated in the United States in his first 100 days in office.
JOE RAEDLE Getty Images President Joe Biden seeks to have 100 million people vaccinated in the United States in his first 100 days in office.

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