New York Daily News

COVID and us

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Four years ago today, New York City mourned the first death from the virus called SARSCoV-2 and the disease we now call COVID-19. Perhaps you recall what happened next: Hospitals overflowed, schools closed, essential workers kept doing their jobs to applause from windows, people masked up, government struggled to answer dozens of interconne­cted challenges, and people died before and after a vaccine arrived.

New York City has lost more than 46,000 lives to the plague; the statewide total now approaches 84,000. Nationwide, COVID deaths have topped 1.1 million, with the United States’ fatality rate far exceeding that in other countries with advanced medical systems.

What the federal government under Donald Trump got wrong could fill a book, and indeed it has filled many volumes detailing the politiciza­tion of science, the triumph of wishful thinking over rapid marshaling of resources, the failure of department­s and layers of bureaucrac­y to coordinate.

But New York leaders made their own share of bad decisions, many of them understand­able at a time when we were all fumbling to understand what we were facing, but some of them not. Then-Gov. Andrew Cuomo once absurdly proclaimed then-President Trump “responsibl­e for every COVID death in New York.” The truth, notwithsta­nding the poster of a conquered mountain of deaths Cuomo commission­ed and sold on the state government website, is the governor and then-Mayor Bill de Blasio fumbled plenty.

The systems of government didn’t work smoothly together, and egos often made matters worse. This was most apparent in the brutal early days, but it has dogged the response all along. We say this as an Editorial Board that heaped praise on many elements of Cuomo’s leadership, and still does so in hindsight. His daily briefings were candid and informativ­e. His decisions were often swift and strong. His decision to send COVID patients back to nursing homes, while unwise, was not responsibl­e for nearly as many deaths as politicall­y motivated critics often claim. That said, it’s true the governor and his staff would go on, in the words of the state comptrolle­r, to “mislead the public” about those death totals.

But a pandemic that took so many lives is much bigger than any leader. If New York is to learn from its response and reform its health care systems and its wider government so that they are better positioned the next time a highly contagious and deadly bug rears its head, it needs to do a deep dive, commission­ing an independen­t look at what went wrong and how it can be fixed. New Jersey just released its own 910-page report; it includes hundreds of recommenda­tions to do things better the next time around.

In 2022, Gov. Hochul commission­ed a review of the state’s pandemic response by an outside firm; that report isn’t expected until the middle of this year. But we already know it won’t be enough, because the firm lacks the authority to subpoena witnesses. Legislatio­n kicking around Albany with bipartisan support would go further, setting up an independen­t state panel with full access to state records, including confidenti­al materials, and the power to interview witnesses under subpoena.

Make it law. Learn the good, bad and ugly of what went right and wrong. There are thousands of lives to honor, and thousands to save.

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