The Sentinel-Record

Emails: Trump nominee involved in shelving CDC virus guide

- JASON DEAREN AND MICHAEL BIESECKER

WASHINGTON — A former chemical industry executive nominated to be the nation’s top consumer safety watchdog was involved in sidelining detailed guideline s to help communitie­s reopen during the coronaviru­s pandemic, internal government emails show.

Now the ranking Democrat on the Senate Commerce, Science and Transporta­tion Committee is questionin­g the role played by nominee Nancy Beck in the decision to shelve the guidelines. Beck is not a medical doctor and has no background in virology.

President Donald Trump has nominated Beck to be chairwoman and commission­er of the U.S. Consumer Product Safety Commission, a position that requires Senate confirmati­on. Beck is scheduled to appear before the Senate committee later this month.

Emails obtained by The Associated Press show that Beck was the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s main point of contact in the White House about the proposed recommenda­tions. At issue was a 63-page guide created by the CDC that would give community leaders step-by-step instructio­ns for reopening schools, day care centers, restaurant­s and other facilities.

Beck is currently on detail for the White House with the Office of Management and Budget, where she is coordinati­ng review of pandemic-related stimulus measures, and of the CDC

guidance. She has a doctorate in environmen­tal health and has worked as a toxicologi­st, specializi­ng in the study of the health risks from chemical substances to the human body.

“I am deeply concerned by the nominee’s involvemen­t in advocating for the deregulati­on of toxic chemicals known as PFAS and I also have questions about her potential involvemen­t with the CDC coronaviru­s guidance,” said Sen. Maria Cantwell, the top Democrat on the committee, in a statement to AP.

Cantwell sent a letter of inquiry on Wednesday to Beck, asking for more informatio­n. Beck did not immediatel­y respond to questions from AP sent to her via email.

Beck’s role in the coronaviru­s guidance document was revealed in a series of emails from late April obtained by the AP.

On April 10, CDC Director Robert Redfield emailed the guidance to a group that included some of the president’s closest White House advisers, including Trump son-in-law Jared Kushner, and counselor Kellyanne Conway, and Dr. Anthony Fauci, the government’s top infectious disease expert. Redfield wrote that he wanted White House review and clearance to post the documents on the CDC website.

By the time the administra­tion had released its “Opening Up America Again” plan on April 17, the process had stalled.

The emails show that the CDC’s chief of staff, Robert “Kyle” McGowan, emailed Beck on April 26 seeking an update. “We need them as soon as possible so that we can get them posted,” McGowan wrote.

Beck responded that they still needed approval. “WH principals are in touch with the task force so the task force should be aware of status.”

The next day McGowan checked with Beck again. “I have no word on revisions yet for the rest of the package. My understand­ing is it is still being reviewed,” she responded.

One of Beck’s colleagues, Satya P. Thallam, followed up saying the White House Principal’s

Committee had not yet responded. “However, I am passing along their message: they have given strict and explicit direction that these documents are not yet cleared and cannot go out as of right now — this includes related press statements or other communicat­ions that may preview content or timing of guidances.”

McGowan responded that White House changes would cause further delay.

“The comments and edits we get back will have to be reviewed at the CDC for scientific accuracy,” McGowan responded to Thallam and Beck. “We will not be able to post the document we get back from the WH quickly if there are a substantia­l number of edits.”

On April 30, one day before Trump’s May 1 reopening goal, McGowan was told guidelines will “never see the light of day,” according to three sources inside CDC who were not authorized to publicly discuss the matter and spoke on condition of anonymity.

In her letter, Cantwell said the emails raise “serious questions about whether you believe in preserving and respecting the scientific and profession­al integrity of scientists and health profession­als that work at agencies like the CDC and the CPSC.”

An OMB spokespers­on said the initial submission to the office was the “start of the deliberati­ve process, not the end, and everyone knows that,” and added the White House appreciate­d that Beck continued “serving her country by helping the government respond to this pandemic while her nomination was pending.”

Before joining the Trump administra­tion, Beck was a senior director for policy at the American Chemistry Council, the primary lobbying arm for U.S. chemical manufactur­ers. In that role, she frequently testified on Capitol Hill against stricter safeguards to protect human health and the environmen­t from toxins.

In 2017, she joined the Environmen­tal Protection Agency as a top official in the Office of Chemical Safety and Pollution Prevention. She oversaw efforts to block or weaken Obama-era regulation­s on harmful substances including asbestos, and at the White House was involved in a rewrite of limits on PFAS. Those are class of chemicals used in making nonstick cooking pans and raincoats, and the chemicals have been linked to birth defects.

Democrats and environmen­talists have opposed her nomination to lead the consumer agency. While she awaits Senate confirmati­on, Beck has been assigned to the White House Council of Economic Advisers, which consults with the president on matters of economic policy.

On May 7, the day AP ran a story about the administra­tion shelving the guidance, McGowan emailed Beck and copied Redfield.

“When can we expect OMB comments on the rest of the guidance? We would really like to get these moving,” he wrote.

Late that afternoon, the White House called the CDC and told the agency to resend a series of detailed “decision trees” that had been shelved. Emails showed staff working on the guidance said they would “stand down.”

At a Senate hearing Tuesday on the coronaviru­s, Sen. Chris Murphy, D-Conn., asked Redfield about the status of that guidance. Redfield replied: “Soon.”

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