The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Efforts to make protective medical gear in US falling flat

- By David A. Lieb

UNIVERSITY CITY, MO. » When the coronaviru­s pandemic first hit the U.S., sales of window coverings at Halcyon Shades quickly went dark. So the suburban St. Louis business did what hundreds of other small manufactur­ers did: It pivoted to make protective supplies, with help from an $870,000 government grant.

But things haven’t worked out as planned. The company quit making face shields because it wasn’t profitable. It still hasn’t sold a single N95 mask because of struggles to get equipment, materials and regulatory approval.

“So far, it has been a net drain of funds and resources and energy,” Halcyon Shades owner Jim Schmersahl said.

Many companies that began producing personal protective equipment with patriotic optimism have scaled back, shut down or given up, according to an Associated Press analysis based on numerous interviews with manufactur­ers. Some already have sold equipment they bought with state government grants.

As COVID-19 was stressing hospitals and shuttering businesses in 2020, elected officials touted the need to boost U.S. production of protective gear. Yet many manufactur­ers who answered the call have faced logistical hurdles, regulatory rejections, slumping demand and fierce competitio­n from foreign suppliers. After the initial scramble for PPE subsided, many industry newcomers had difficulty selling products.

“At the end of the day, when everybody said they wanted American-made, nobody’s buying, not even the state,” said Tony Blogumas, vice president of Green Resources Consulting, a rural Mis

souri firm that received an $800,000 state grant but has sold only a few thousand masks. “We’re kind of upset about the whole situation.”

Missouri Gov. Mike Parson also is disappoint­ed. His administra­tion divided $20 million in federal COVID-19 relief funds among 48 businesses for the production of masks, gowns, sanitizer and other supplies. Parson hoped to seed a permanent field of manufactur­ers.

“I’m still a firm believer in that — that we need to be making PPE here in this state,” Parson said. “Unfortunat­ely, a lot of entities went right back to where they were getting it before.”

The onset of the pandemic revealed that the U.S. was highly dependent on foreign countries for protective gear. When China limited exports because of its own battle against COVID-19, U.S. stockpiles plummeted. Prices skyrockete­d as federal officials, governors and health care systems competed for supplies.

Though federal stockpiles have been replenishe­d, shriveling domestic production has raised concerns that state government­s, medical facilities and others could again get stuck scrambling for gear during a future pandemic.

The AP identified more than $125 million in grants to spur production of pandemic supplies made to over 300 business in 10 states — Alabama, Hawaii, Indiana, Kansas, Louisiana, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, Missouri, New York and Ohio. It’s possible that grants were awarded in additional states, but there is no central clearingho­use to track them.

In November 2020, Alabama awarded one of the single largest grants — nearly $10.6 million from federal pandemic relief funds — to Homtex Inc. The company was to equip a new Selma facility to make 250 million surgical masks and 45 million N95 masks annually. The plant has yet to make anything due to a lack of customers.

“I can’t produce product that I can’t sell,” Homtex President Jeremy Wootten said.

Some PPE manufactur­ers point to federal regulation­s as part of the reason for their struggles. Threeply masks need FDA approval to be marketed for medical use — an important designatio­n for building a long-term customer base. Companies need approval from the National Institute for Occupation­al Safety and Health to market products as N95 respirator­s, which filter at least 95% of airborne particles.

During the first two years of the pandemic, NIOSH approved 30 new manufactur­ers — more than seven times the typical number during a similar pre-pandemic period, according to agency data. Some applicatio­ns remain pending, while numerous others were denied.

Halcyon Shades’ N95 certificat­ion was rejected in October because its samples didn’t have head straps attached. While the company works on another applicatio­n, its equipment sits idle, with partially finished masks paused on a conveyor belt.

Without federal approval, “we’re just dead in the water,” said Schmersahl, the company owner.

Progress reports filed with the Missouri Department of Economic Developmen­t show that nearly all its PPE grant recipients faced challenges by July 2021, especially with sales.

Ohio awarded $20.8 million to 73 businesses to manufactur­e pandemic-related supplies, according to state data. Of 60 businesses that complied with a recent reporting deadline, more than one-third no longer produced PPE by the end of 2021.

Dozens of businesses banded together to form the American Mask Manufactur­er’s Associatio­n with the goal of sustaining the industry. But the group’s membership has dwindled as more and more go out of business.

Associatio­n organizers say the industry has reached a critical point. They want the federal government to treat PPE manufactur­ers like the nation’s defense industry — entering into long-term contracts to perpetuall­y replenish a stockpile for future pandemics or emergencie­s.

“If the federal government doesn’t come in and help support the U.S. manufactur­ing base, it’s almost certainly going to go back to China, and we’ll be just as vulnerable as we were in early 2020 and 2019,” said Brent Dillie, the associatio­n chairman and co-founder of Premium-ppe, a Virginia manufactur­er started during the pandemic that has shed about two-thirds of its roughly 300 employees.

 ?? JEFF ROBERSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Jim Schmersahl, owner of Halcyon Shades, poses with material used in making N-95 masks Friday, March 18, 2022, in University City, Mo. Halcyon is small company that normally makes window shades, but when the pandemic hit, its sales plummeted. Halcyon applied for the state grants to make PPE as a way to try to keep its employees at work and keep the company afloat.
JEFF ROBERSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS Jim Schmersahl, owner of Halcyon Shades, poses with material used in making N-95 masks Friday, March 18, 2022, in University City, Mo. Halcyon is small company that normally makes window shades, but when the pandemic hit, its sales plummeted. Halcyon applied for the state grants to make PPE as a way to try to keep its employees at work and keep the company afloat.
 ?? JEFF ROBERSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Angstrom Manufactur­ing president Chris Carron poses for a photo with machinery the company uses to make surgical masks Wednesday, March 23, 2022, in Ste. Genevieve, Mo. Angstrom normally makes dental equipment but expanded with the help of a grant during the pandemic to produce personal protective equipment, churning out millions of surgical-style masks.
JEFF ROBERSON/ASSOCIATED PRESS Angstrom Manufactur­ing president Chris Carron poses for a photo with machinery the company uses to make surgical masks Wednesday, March 23, 2022, in Ste. Genevieve, Mo. Angstrom normally makes dental equipment but expanded with the help of a grant during the pandemic to produce personal protective equipment, churning out millions of surgical-style masks.

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