The Oklahoman

Senate to convene with risks due to no quick virus testing

- By Lisa Mascaro

WASHINGTON—The Senate is set to convene Monday but the health risks from the corona virus are being laid bare as the Capitol physician says there is no way to quickly test the 100 senators and staff.

It' s a high-profile snapshot of the national testing short fall as the Trump administra­tion strives to resume business as usual to kick-start the economy.

“The sooner we can have testing, the safer we' ll be ,” Senate Democratic leader Chuck Sc hume rs aid Thursday on “The Late Show with Stephen Colbert.”

As Congress prepares to partially return next week, the legislativ­e branch will be a changed place, after all but shuttering f or more than a month amid the virus outbreak.

Senators are being advised to wear masks, stay six feet apart and keep most of their staff working from home, according to official guidance provided to top staff.

Republican­s will resume their private lunches, but it will be just three senators to a table. Democrats will have lunch by conference call.

Testing though, and the stark lack of it, is sounding alarms.

On a conference call Thursday, the Capitol physician said his office does not have a testing system available for instant virus checks, as happens at the White House, according to a Republican familiar with the call with GOP chiefs of staff.

Instead, the physician said the office only checks those lawmakers who are showing symptoms. Test results can take up to seven days, he told them.

The U.S. Capitol remains closed to visitors, a shutdown extended to mid-May, and the Washington, D. C ., region remains under stayhome orders.

“This is a dangerous moment in our region,” said Rep. J amie Raskin, D- Md., whose district includes the surroundin­g suburbs that are home to many federal workers.

While the Senate has scheduled key public hearings, guidance from the Senate Rules Committee says people can view the proceeding­s online. Several House committees are also expected to hold hearings.

Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell's office is expected to send out additional guidance ahead of Monday's scheduled reopening, officials said.

The House declined this week to bring i ts 400- plus members back into session after t he Capitol physician warned it was not worth the health risks.

McConnell has declined to say if he consulted with the physician in deciding to resume Senate operations.

“I think we can conduct our business safely,” McConnell said this week on Fox.

Lawmakers are especially concerned about the hundreds of cooks, custodial staff and maintenanc­e workers needed to run the vast Capitol complex, many who com mute from the region that remains a virus hot spot.

The Capitol physician was privately briefing House lawmakers Friday.

A memo from the Office of t he Attending Physician said it“continues to recommend teleworkin­g for all Congressio­nal offices.”

But one Republican, Sen. Mike Lee of Utah, in a strict reading of the Constituti­on, said lawmakers must be present.

“If some of my colleague sin the Senate are really concerned that they won't survive the process of doing what they were hired to do, then perhaps they should consider another line of work ,” Lee said in a statement.

As Congress considers the next coronaviru­s aid package, t he Senate's attention will largely be focused on what McConnell calls the “personnel business ”— confirming t he president's judicial and executive branch nominees.

Among those are Justin Walker, a McConnell-backed nominee for the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia Circuit, often seen as stepping stone for future Supreme Court nominees.

Also f acing a nomination hearing will be John Ratcliffe, the Republican congressma­n from Texas who is President Donald Trump's choice to be the new director of the Office of National Intelligen­ce.

Schumer said t he Senate instead should focus on congressio­nal oversight of t he federal coronaviru­s response.

Democrats have called on Trump to implement a national testing strategy, using t he wartime Defense Production Act to ensure a steady medical supply swabs, lab supplies and other testing materials as states consider ea sing off stayhome restrictio­ns.

For the next aid package, Speaker Nancy P el os is aid the states and cities are seekin gas much as $1 trillion to prevent layoffs as costs skyrocket during the pandemic and revenues plummet during the economic shutdown.

Republican­s are resisting what t hey call a “bail out” for state government­s. GOP senators heard privately this week from Hank Paulson, the former Treasury Secretary, about strategies used during the 2008 financial crisis.

 ?? ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] ?? Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., speaks with reporters, April 21, after the Senate approved a nearly $500 billion coronaviru­s aid bill on Capitol Hill in Washington. [PATRICK SEMANSKY/
ASSOCIATED PRESS FILE PHOTO] Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., speaks with reporters, April 21, after the Senate approved a nearly $500 billion coronaviru­s aid bill on Capitol Hill in Washington. [PATRICK SEMANSKY/

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