The Sentinel-Record

States trashing troves of masks and pandemic gear as costly stockpiles linger and expire

- JENNIFER PELTZ AND DAVID A. LIEB

When the coronaviru­s pandemic took hold in an unprepared U.S., many states like Ohio scrambled for masks and other protective gear. Supplies were so limited in 2020 that the state bought millions of medical gowns from a marketing and printing company and spent about $20 million to try to get personal protective equipment made in-state.

Three years later, as the grips of the pandemic have loosened, Ohio and other states are now trying to deal with an excess of protective gear, ditching their supplies in droves.

With expiration dates passing and few requests to tap into the stockpile, Ohio auctioned off 393,000 gowns for just $2,451 and ended up throwing away another 7.2 million, along with expired masks, gloves and other materials. The now expiring supplies had cost about $29 million in federal money.

A similar reckoning is happening around the country. Items are aging, and as a deadline to allocate federal COVID-19 cash approaches next year, states must decide how much to invest in maintainin­g warehouses and supply stockpiles.

An Associated Press investigat­ion found that at least 15 states, from Alaska to Vermont, have tossed some of their trove of PPE because of expiration, surpluses and a lack of willing takers.

Into the trash went more than 18 million masks, 22 million gowns, 500,000 gloves, and more. That’s not counting states that didn’t give the AP exact figures or responded in cases or other measuremen­ts. Rhode Island said it shredded and recycled 829 tons of PPE; Maryland disposed of over $93 million in supplies.

“What a real waste. That’s what happens when you don’t prepare, when you have a bustand-boom public health system,” where a lack of planning leads to panicked over-purchasing in emergencie­s, said Dr. Georges Benjamin, executive director of the American Public Health Associatio­n. “It shows that we really have to do a better job of managing our stockpiles.”

The AP sent inquiries about PPE stockpiles to all 50 states over the past several months. About half responded.

States emphasize that they distribute­d far more gear than they discarded and have gone to lengths to donate the leftovers. Washington state sent hundreds of thousands of supplies to the Marshall Islands last year. Pennsylvan­ia says it offered PPE to 10,000 cities, heath facilities and more throughout the pandemic. Both states still ended up throwing out loads of expired items.

Some states found limited post-expiration uses, such as training exercises.

Many states are keeping at least a portion, and sometimes all, of their remaining protective gear. Some, such as Minnesota, even plan to update their stockpiles.

But others say the vagaries of the pandemic and the PPE supply left no choice but to acquire the items, and now to throw them out, however reluctantl­y. Expiration dates are set because materials can degrade and might not work as intended. The Federal Emergency Management Agency has set the fair market value of expired supplies at zero dollars.

“Anytime you’re involved in a situation where you’re recalling how difficult it was to get something in the first place, and then having to watch that go or not be used in the way it was intended to be used, certainly, there’s some frustratio­n in that,” said Louis Eubank, who runs the South Carolina health department’s COVID-19 coordinati­on office. The state has discarded over 650,000 expired masks.

Before the coronaviru­s pandemic, health care product distributo­rs typically kept 20 to 30 days of supplies. That wasn’t enough when the pandemic struck and demand skyrockete­d for N95 masks, gloves and gowns. They became so scarce that some health care workers wore homemade masks and used trash bags for gowns.

Hampered by years of underfundi­ng and expanded responsibi­lities, the U.S government’s Strategic National Stockpile “was not equipped to handle the COVID-19 pandemic,” according to an inspector general’s report. As the federal stockpile dwindled, states plunged into global bidding wars and anything-goes arrangemen­ts. Massachuse­tts even used the New England Patriots’ team plane to collect masks from China.

The explosive demand triggered a surge — and ultimately a hard crash — for American PPE manufactur­ers. The AP found in 2020 that states spent over $7 billion in a few months on PPE, ventilator­s and some other high-demand medical devices in a seller’s market. Ultimately, the federal government paid for many of the supplies.

“There was no way to know, at the time of purchase, how long the supply deficit would last or what quantities would be needed,” Ohio Department of Health spokespers­on Ken Gordon said.

Ohio distribute­d more than 227 million pieces of protective equipment during the pandemic. But as the supply crunch and the health crisis eased, demand faded, especially for gowns.

Now, “states, hospitals, manufactur­ers — everybody in the whole system — has extra product,” said Linda Rouse O’Neill of the Health Industry Distributo­rs Associatio­n.

Given the glut, stockpiled items are selling for bargain prices, if at all. Vermont got $82.50 for 105,000 boot covers and 29 cents apiece for thousands of safety goggles.

The glut extends beyond states. Georgia’s Fulton County, which encompasse­s Atlanta, dispensed gloves, hand sanitizer and other supplies by the dozens of boxes at a public PPE giveaway in March.

New York City said it auctioned a heap of “non-medical-grade” PPE that was expiring or supplanted by better versions. Health Commission­er Dr. Ashwin Vasan told local lawmakers in May that officials would focus on enhancing supply contracts for future emergencie­s, rather than prioritizi­ng “a static stockpile of commoditie­s.”

Missouri’s mental health department planned but scrapped an auction of thousands of extra masks, gowns and other protective items bought with federal coronaviru­s relief money. The agency cited a belief that federal rules barred such a sale, but the U.S. Treasury Department later told the AP that states can sell excess PPE.

Supply chain chaos prompted some government­s to place multiple orders, resulting in surpluses when the shipments belatedly arrived.

A New York state-run veterans’ home was so deluged by PPE deliveries in early 2021 that it stashed them under tarps in a parking lot. By the time a warehouse was arranged four months later, between $560,000 and $1.6 million of supplies were too damaged to use — and cost another $21,000 to incinerate, according to a state inspector general’s office report. Another $779,000 in expired items have been discarded.

Striking a balance between preparedne­ss and surpluses is “a major dilemma” for government­s, said Scott Amey of the Project on Government Oversight, a Washington, D.C.-based watchdog group. And while politician­s vowed in 2020 never to be caught off guard again, “memories are short, budgets are tight,” Amey noted.

In Wisconsin, a legislativ­e committee axed from the budget $17.2 million that would have funded a warehouse with an ongoing 60-day supply of PPE for two years.

The state Department of Health Services said it is now “demobilizi­ng the warehouse” and trying to donate the supplies. Already, Wisconsin has tossed nearly 1.7 million masks and almost 1 million gowns.

In Michigan, a 2021 state law requires the state health department to keep a stockpile of up to two months of medical supplies, and the department’s website shows more than 38 million items on hand.

But one of the law’s sponsors, Republican state Rep. John Roth, said he now thinks “we have to take another look at it,” suggesting a one-month supply might mean less waste.

The Health Industry Distributo­rs Associatio­n recommends that product distributo­rs maintain a 60-to-90-day supply to guard against demand spikes. But the group says it’s probably unnecessar­y for everyone in the system — from manufactur­ers to doctors’ offices — to have such a large cushion.

Some government officials concur.

“It’s not really practical for most local health department­s to have a large stockpile of materials for ‘just in case,’” said Adriane Casalotti of the National Associatio­n of County and City Health Officials. “They have limited budgets. They also have limited space.”

Pennsylvan­ia officials are aiming for a 15-day stockpile after frank conversati­ons about what they can afford not only to keep, but to keep replacing. Tens of thousands of cases of PPE already have expired and been slated for disposal.

“If we had unlimited federal funding, or even significan­tly more federal funding, for public health preparedne­ss, that 60-day stockpile or 90-day stockpile would be a fantastic idea,” said Andy Pickett, the Health Department’s emergency preparedne­ss and response director.

Meanwhile, Missouri’s health department has maintained a 90-day supply of PPE, based on the highest-demand months of the pandemic. It’s keeping even expired materials, presuming the federal government will OK their use in an emergency as it did for COVID-19. Missouri has insured the stockpile at $19 million.

“If you don’t make the investment — and perhaps the investment that is never used — then you may not be prepared to assist the public when it’s needed,” Missouri health director Paula Nickelson said.

 ?? (Brad Bashore/Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services via AP) ?? Boxes of personal protection equipment maintained by the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services are shown stacked in a warehouse on Dec. 1 in Jefferson City, Mo.
(Brad Bashore/Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services via AP) Boxes of personal protection equipment maintained by the Missouri Department of Health and Senior Services are shown stacked in a warehouse on Dec. 1 in Jefferson City, Mo.

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