Hartford Courant

Trump team won’t disclose how it’s distributi­ng supplies

- By Noam N. Levey Los Angeles Times

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion is refusing to disclose how it is distributi­ng medical supplies for the coronaviru­s response that were brought to the U.S. at taxpayer expense through a White House initiative known as Project Air Bridge.

The administra­tion instead has allowed six multibilli­on-dollar medical supply companies that are receiving government aid to import the supplies to block public release of the data, according to the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

“At this time, FEMA does not have the authority to release this informatio­n,” a spokespers­on for the agency said in response to questions from the Los Angeles Times.

A spokespers­on for McKesson Corp., one of the companies, denied making any demand that informatio­n be kept secret. “Consistent with McKesson’s commitment to fighting this pandemic, McKesson is cooperatin­g with FEMA to facilitate the release of state-by-state data as appropriat­e,” the spokespers­on said.

The lack of disclosure effectivel­y hinders any public accounting of which states are receiving the most assistance and what formulas are being used to distribute the equipment, despite a public investment of tens of millions of dollars in the air-lift operation.

The lack of transparen­cy about distributi­ons comes on top of the administra­tion’s refusal to provide informatio­n about the financial terms the White House struck with the medical distributi­on companies, which together reported more than $2 billion in profits last year.

And it parallels a similar reluctance by the administra­tion to detail how it distribute­d supplies from the Strategic National Stockpile at the outset of the coronaviru­s outbreak. That informatio­n only came to light after an investigat­ion by the House oversight committee.

None of the other supply companies involved in Project Air Bridge — Cardinal Health Inc., Medline Industries Inc., Henry Schein Inc., Owens & Minor Inc. and Concordanc­e Healthcare Solutions LLC — responded to questions about releasing the data.

President Donald Trump and other administra­tion officials have hailed Project Air Bridge, which the president’s son-in-law Jared Kushner helped establish, as a public-private partnershi­p that is helping to alleviate shortages of masks and other protective equipment at U.S. hospitals, clinics and other medical facilities by importing them from China, which is the world’s primary manufactur­er of such goods.

The program, which the White House calls Project Air Bridge and which FEMA calls Project Airbridge, has allowed the nation’s six largest medical distributi­on companies to fly their supplies from China to the U.S. rather than relying on slower cargo ships.

The federal government pays air freight companies, including FedEx, UPS and Radiant Logistics Inc., for the trans-Pacific flights, which come into Los Angeles, New York, Chicago and other distributi­on hubs.

The participat­ing medical-supply distributi­on companies then send half of the shipments to customers in coronaviru­s hot spots and can send the remaining half to their existing customers elsewhere in the country, according to FEMA. A FEMA spokespers­on said the supply companies have allowed the federal agency to share some informatio­n with state governors.

“FEMA requested, and received, permission from the Project Airbridge distributo­rs to be able to share detailed state-by-state personal protective equipment orders/deliveries with governors,” the spokespers­on said. “This was done so each governor could use this informatio­n for their emergency management purposes and to better understand the burn rate of the equipment.”

In addition to obscuring where supplies are going, the Trump administra­tion also hasn’t offered a financial accounting of how much the air-lift project costs.

 ?? MANDEL NGAN/AFP ?? White House senior adviser Jared Kushner helped establish what’s billed as a bid to alleviate coronaviru­s supplies.
MANDEL NGAN/AFP White House senior adviser Jared Kushner helped establish what’s billed as a bid to alleviate coronaviru­s supplies.

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