The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Trump uses wartime act but GM says it’s already moving fast

- By Tom Krisher

Twelve days ago, General Motors put hundreds of workers on an urgent project to build breathing machines as hospitals and governors pleaded for more in response to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

But President Donald Trump, claiming the company wasn’t moving fast enough, on Friday invoked the Defense Production Act, which gives the government broad authority to direct companies to meet national defense needs.

Experts on managing factory production say GM is already making an extraordin­ary effort for a company that normally isn’t in the business of producing ventilator­s.

“That is lightning-fast speed to secure suppliers, learn how the products work, and make space in their manufactur­ing plant. You can’t get much faster than that,” said Kaitlin Wowak, a professor at the University of Notre Dame who focuses on industrial supply chains.

GM expects to start making ventilator­s in midApril, ramping up to a rate of 10,000 per month at as quickly as it can. The company is working with Ventec Life Systems, a small Seattleare­a ventilator maker, and both say the Defense Production

Act of 1950 doesn’t change what they’re doing because they’re already moving as fast as they can, fronting millions in capital with an uncertain return.

Peter Navarro, Trump’s assistant for manufactur­ing policy, said Saturday that invoking the act was needed because GM “dragged its heels for days.”

It was only a few days earlier that Trump had been holding up GM and Ford as examples of companies voluntaril­y responding to the outbreak without the need for him to invoke the act. Then on Friday, he slammed GM on Twitter and during his daily briefing for foot-dragging. On Sunday,

he was back to praising the company during another briefing: “General Motors is doing a fantastic job. I don’t think we have to worry about them anymore.”

But GM says it had been proceeding on the same course all along.

The company got into the ventilator business on March 18 after being approached by stopthespr­ead. org, a coalition of CEOs trying to organize companies to respond to the COVID-19 disease that has already claimed more than 30,000 lives globally. The organizati­on introduced GM to Ventec, which makes small portable ventilator­s in Bothell, Washington.

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