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  • Pitkin County Open Space and Trails ranger Pryce Hadley puts...

    Kelsey Brunner/AP

    Pitkin County Open Space and Trails ranger Pryce Hadley puts a new social distancing sign at the trailhead of Smuggler Mountain Road on March 24, 2020, in Aspen, Colo. The sign urges people to follow the social distancing guidelines to help keep access to public spaces available during the COVID-19 pandemic.

  • John Minchillo / AP

  • A protester speaks through a megaphone during a rally against...

    Chris Graythen / Getty Images

    A protester speaks through a megaphone during a rally against Louisiana's stay-at-home order and economic shutdown on April 17, 2020 in Baton Rouge, Louisiana. Governor John Bell Edwards has said Louisianas high rate of infections and deaths does not position the state to quickly open back up.

  • Medical personnel are silhouetted against the back of a tent...

    Chris OMeara / AP

    Medical personnel are silhouetted against the back of a tent before the start of coronavirus testing in the parking lot outside of Raymond James Stadium on March 25, 2020, in Tampa, Fla.

  • Daniela Dahman, 9, reacts as her father Jamie Dahman calms...

    Rogelio V. Solis / AP

    Daniela Dahman, 9, reacts as her father Jamie Dahman calms and restrains his son Anton Dahman, 3, as he braces for a nasal swab swipe by one of the Delta Health Center staff at a free drive-thu COVID-19 testing facility at the center's Dr. H. Jack Geiger Medical Center in Mound Bayou, Miss., April 16, 2020. The center offered free testing to anyone with no pre-testing appointment and no out-of-pocket charges whether they had insurance or not.

  • A crowd gathers to drink at Standard Hall, a bar,...

    Doral Chenoweth/The Columbus Dispatch

    A crowd gathers to drink at Standard Hall, a bar, May 15, 2020 in Columbus, Ohio. Ohio restaurants have the option to offer outdoor dining, the next step toward resuming normal business operations under Republican Gov. Mike DeWine's state reopening plan.

  • Workers wearing personal protective equipment bury bodies in a trench...

    John Minchillo / AP

    Workers wearing personal protective equipment bury bodies in a trench on Hart Island, April 9, 2020, in the Bronx borough of New York. On Thursday, New York City's medical examiner confirmed that the city has shortened the amount of time it will hold on to remains to 14 days from 30 days before they will be transferred for temporary internment at a City Cemetery. Earlier in the week, Mayor Bill DeBlasio said that officials have explored the possibility of temporary burials on Hart Island, a strip of land in Long Island Sound that has long served as the city's potter's field. (AP Photo/John Minchillo)

  • A dog peeks out as a Taco Bell employee delivers...

    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    A dog peeks out as a Taco Bell employee delivers an order to a customer at the drive-up window of the restaurant on March 31, 2020 in Hollywood, Florida. Mark King, CEO of Taco Bell Corp. announced that Tuesday, March 31, Taco Bell drive-thru guests across America will receive a free seasoned beef Nacho Cheese Doritos Locos Tacos, no purchase necessary while supplies last as part of its coronavirus response.

  • Pictures of parishioners are seen on the pews as the...

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    Pictures of parishioners are seen on the pews as the Rev. Brian X. Needles celebrates Easter Mass via livestream on April 12, 2020 at Our Lady of Sorrows Catholic Church in South Orange, New Jersey.

  • Rev. Patrick Mahoney, director of the Christian Defense Coalition, kneels...

    Drew Angerer / Getty Images

    Rev. Patrick Mahoney, director of the Christian Defense Coalition, kneels in prayer as he livestreams a Good Friday service on the grounds of the U.S. Capitol on April 10, 2020 in Washington, D.C.

  • Michael Davis puts the ring on his bride Natasha during...

    APU GOMES / AFP via Getty Images

    Michael Davis puts the ring on his bride Natasha during their wedding ceremony officiated by a clerk recorder at the Honda Center parking lot on April 21, 2020 in Anaheim, California. The County of Orange Clerk Recorder employees implemented a variety of social distancing techniques to safely issue licenses and marry couples during the novel coronavirus pandemic.

  • Virginia Senate Clerk Susan Schaar, ties a mask on Virginia...

    Steve Helber / AP

    Virginia Senate Clerk Susan Schaar, ties a mask on Virginia State Senator Thomas Norment, R-James City County, as they prepare for the reconvene session at the Science Museum of Virginia Wednesday April 22, 2020, in Richmond, Va. The Senate is meeting in a remote location due to COVID-19 social distancing restrictions.

  • A patient is evacuated from the Holland America cruise ship...

    Mike Stocker/South Florida Sun-Sentinel

    A patient is evacuated from the Holland America cruise ship the Zaandam at Port Everglades in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., on April 2, 2020. A cruise ship that had at least two passengers die of coronavirus and others sickened while barred from South American ports has finally docked in Florida. The Zaandam and a sister ship sent to help it, the Rotterdam, were given permission to unload passengers at Port Everglades on Thursday, after days of negotiations with officials who feared it would divert resources from a region with a spike in virus cases.

  • \Volunteer Joe Gale delivers boxes of groceries to immigrants on...

    John Moore / Getty Images

    \Volunteer Joe Gale delivers boxes of groceries to immigrants on lockdown due to coronavirus on April 16, 2020 in Long Island, New York. With little health insurance and no unemployment benefits, immigrant communities have been especially hard hit by COVIOD-19 and the economic effects of the prolonged crisis.

  • Empty chairs sit on the beach, March 19, 2020, in...

    Lynne Sladky/AP

    Empty chairs sit on the beach, March 19, 2020, in Miami Beach, Fla. Florida's largest county inched closer to economic shutdown as Miami-Dade County's mayor ordered all beaches, parks and "non-essential" commercial and retail businesses closed because of the coronavirus outbreak. Mayor Carlos Gimenez's order Thursday allows several businesses to remain open, including health care providers, grocery stores, gas stations, restaurants and banks.

  • A man wears a face mask as he check his...

    Kena Betancur/AFP/Getty Images

    A man wears a face mask as he check his phone in Times Square on March 22, 2020, in New York City.

  • People wait in their cars, April 9, 2020, at Traders...

    William Luther/The San Antonio Express-News

    People wait in their cars, April 9, 2020, at Traders Village for the San Antonio Food Bank to begin food distribution. The need for emergency food aid has exploded in recent weeks due to the COVID-19 pandemic. The Labor Department said Thursday 6.6 million people applied for first-time unemployment benefits.

  • Tulane University graduates pop Prosecco as they celebrate graduation on...

    Gerald Herbert / AP

    Tulane University graduates pop Prosecco as they celebrate graduation on a largely empty Bourbon Street in the French Quarter of New Orleans, May 12, 2020.

  • A person sets up power and oxygen lines in an...

    Stephanie Keith / Getty Images

    A person sets up power and oxygen lines in an emergency field hospital to aid in the COVID-19 pandemic in Central Park on March 30, 2020 in New York City. The field hospital is the work of the Samaritan's Purse organization and will add 68 hospital beds specifically equipped to serve as a respiratory care unit and to be administered by Mt. Sinai Hospital in Manhattan.

  • Sheila Kelly, owner of Powell's Steamer Co. & Pub, center,...

    Rich Pedroncelli / AP

    Sheila Kelly, owner of Powell's Steamer Co. & Pub, center, stands behind makeshift barriers as she helps patrons at her restaurant in the El Dorado County town of Placerville, California, May 13, 2020. It was the first day serving in-dining meals since the state's lockdown order.

  • Rev. Micah Muhlen, OFM, prays prior to a modest and...

    Ross D. Franklin/AP

    Rev. Micah Muhlen, OFM, prays prior to a modest and shortened service at St. Mary's Roman Catholic Basilica, attended by very few parishioners due to the coronavirus on March 22, 2020, in Phoenix.

  • Medical workers load a patient from Andover Subacute and Rehabilitation...

    Eduardo Munoz Alvarez / Getty Images

    Medical workers load a patient from Andover Subacute and Rehabilitation Center into an ambulance while wearing masks and personal protective equipment (PPE) on April 16, 2020 in Andover, New Jersey. After an anonymous tip to police, 17 people were found dead at the long-term care facility, including two nurses, where at least 76 patients and 41 staff members have tested positive for COVID-19.

  • Customer Joseph Nathan loads toilet paper into the trunk of...

    John Minchillo / AP

    Customer Joseph Nathan loads toilet paper into the trunk of his car after shopping at a Stop & Shop supermarket that opened special morning hours to serve people 60-years and older due to coronavirus concerns on March 20, 2020, in Teaneck, N.J.

  • A homeless man reacts during a test by workers of...

    EVA MARIE UZCATEGUI / AFP via Getty Images

    A homeless man reacts during a test by workers of the Miami-Dade County Homeless Trust for coronavirus disease (COVID-19)in downtown Miami, Florida on April 16, 2020.

  • Wearing a scarf over her mouth and nose, Speaker of...

    Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

    Wearing a scarf over her mouth and nose, Speaker of the House Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) is surrounded by security and staff as she arrives for her weekly news conference during the novel coronavirus pandemic at the U.S. Capitol April 24, 2020 in Washington, DC. President Donald Trump is expected to sign a bipartisan $484 billion coronavirus relief package to restart a depleted small business loan program and to provide funds for hospitals and COVID-19 testing.

  • People arrive at a temporary homeless shelter with painted social-distancing...

    Ethan Miller / Getty Images

    People arrive at a temporary homeless shelter with painted social-distancing boxes in a parking lot at Cashman Center on March 30, 2020 in Las Vegas, Nevada. Catholic Charities of Southern Nevada was closed last week after a homeless man who used their services tested positive for the coronavirus, leaving about 500 people with no overnight shelter. The city of Las Vegas, Clark County and local homeless providers plan to operate the shelter through April 3rd when it is anticipated that the Catholic Charities facility will be back open. The city is also reserving the building spaces at Cashman Center in case of an overflow of hospital patients.

  • A woman wearing a mask walks the Brooklyn Bridge in...

    Victor J. Blue / Getty Images

    A woman wearing a mask walks the Brooklyn Bridge in the midst of the coronavirus (COVID-19) outbreak on March 20, 2020, in New York City.

  • A subway rider uses a tissue to protect her hand...

    John Minchillo / AP

    A subway rider uses a tissue to protect her hand while holding onto a pole as COVID-19 concerns drive down ridership in New York on March 19, 2020.

  • President Donald Trump speaks during the daily briefing on the...

    MANDEL NGAN / AFP via Getty Images

    President Donald Trump speaks during the daily briefing on the novel coronavirus, COVID-19, in the Brady Briefing Room at the White House on March 31, 2020, in Washington, DC. - Trump on Tuesday warned of a "very painful" two weeks ahead as the United States wrestles with a surge in coronavirus cases.

  • Shoppers wait in line at Costco in Lincoln Park as...

    Steven Rosenberg / Chicago Tribune

    Shoppers wait in line at Costco in Lincoln Park as they stock up on supplies over concerns about the coronavirus on March 13, 2020.

  • Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., center, speaks with...

    Patrick Semansky / AP

    Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell of Ky., center, speaks with reporters outside the Senate chamber on Capitol Hill in Washington, April 9, 2020. Senate Democrats on Thursday stalled President Donald Trump's request for $250 billion to supplement a "paycheck protection" program for businesses crippled by the coronavirus outbreak, demanding protections for minority-owned businesses and money for health care providers and state and local governments.

  • The Rev. Paul Marc Goulet prays with people in their...

    John Locher / AP

    The Rev. Paul Marc Goulet prays with people in their cars at an Easter drive-in service at the International Church of Las Vegas, April 12, 2020.

  • Judie Shape, center, who has tested positive for the coronavirus,...

    Ted S. Warren / AP

    Judie Shape, center, who has tested positive for the coronavirus, but isn't showing symptoms, presses her hand against her window after a visit through the window and on the phone with her daughter, Lori Spencer, left, and her son-in-law Michael Spencer, March 17, 2020, at the Life Care Center in Kirkland, Washington, near Seattle. In-person visits are not allowed at the nursing home, which is at the center of the outbreak of the new coronavirus in the United States.

  • Jack Montemagni, 88, laughs with a fellow bar patron after...

    Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune

    Jack Montemagni, 88, laughs with a fellow bar patron after the two hugged at Papa's Blue Spruce Resort pub, May 14, 2020 in Lake Geneva, Wisconsin.

  • The USNS Mercy hospital ship leaves port March 23, 2020,...

    Gregory Bull / AP

    The USNS Mercy hospital ship leaves port March 23, 2020, in San Diego. USNS Mercy commanding officer Capt. John R. Rotruck says the ship has 1,000 beds and will begin taking patients who do not have coronavirus from area hospitals a day after it docks in Los Angeles.

  • Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock...

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    Traders work on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) on March 9, 2020 in New York City. As global fears from the coronavirus continue to escalate, trading was halted for 15 minutes after the opening bell as stocks fell 7 percent.

  • Linda Bodell, from Minnesota, takes in some sun on the...

    Joe Raedle / Getty Images

    Linda Bodell, from Minnesota, takes in some sun on the walkway leading to the beach on March 31, 2020 in Hollywood, Florida. The City of Hollywood along with other cities along the coastline have shuttered their beaches in an attempt to contain COVID-19.

  • A woman wears a face covering with the likeness of...

    John Bazemore/AP

    A woman wears a face covering with the likeness of shooting victim Ahmaud Arbery printed on it during a rally to protest Arbery's killing Friday, May 8, 2020, in Brunswick Ga. Two men have been charged with murder in the February shooting death of Ahmaud Arbery, whom they had pursued in a truck after spotting him running in their neighborhood.

  • Dr. Elissa Palmer stands on a ladder to test a...

    John Locher / AP

    Dr. Elissa Palmer stands on a ladder to test a patient in a truck for the coronavirus at a drive-thru testing site March 24, 2020, in Las Vegas.

  • A line of cars stretches over two miles as people...

    David J. Phillip/AP

    A line of cars stretches over two miles as people wait to enter a drive-thru testing site for COVID-19 at United Memorial Medical Center, March 19, 2020, in Houston.

  • Hundreds of people wait in line at Forest Park Apartments...

    Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

    Hundreds of people wait in line at Forest Park Apartments to receive food distributed by Montgomery County Public Schools as part of a program to feed children while schools are closed due to the coronavirus on March 20, 2020, in Silver Spring, Maryland.

  • Passengers from the Princess Cruises Grand Princess cruise ship are...

    Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

    Passengers from the Princess Cruises Grand Princess cruise ship are escorted to a charter plane at Oakland International Airport on March 10, 2020 in Oakland, California. Passengers are slowly disembarking from the Princess Cruises Grand Princess a day after it docked at the Port of Oakland. Some passengers will be flown to other states where they will quarantine for 14 days. The ship was held off the coast of California after 21 people on board tested tested positive for COVID-19 also known as the Coronavirus.

  • A marker for social distancing is seen on the pavement...

    Mandel Ngan/Getty-AFP

    A marker for social distancing is seen on the pavement outside of a tavern in the normally busy shopping district of Georgetown in Washington on March 23, 2020.

  • A person has their temperature taken at a control point...

    Eric Gay / AP

    A person has their temperature taken at a control point on a covered footbridge to be screened for symptoms before entering the Dell Deton Medical Center at the University of Texas in Austin, Texas, March 25, 2020.

  • Members of the press have their temperature taken before a...

    Brendan Smialowski/AFP/Getty Images/AFP via Getty Images

    Members of the press have their temperature taken before a COVID-19 pandemic briefing at the White House on March 17, 2020, in Washington.

  • Residents leave Chelsea City Hall with food distributed by the...

    Scott Eisen / Getty Images

    Residents leave Chelsea City Hall with food distributed by the National Guard on April 17, 2020 in Chelsea, Massachusetts. Chelsea has the highest concentration of COVID-19 infections as well as essential workers in the state.

  • Los Angeles Police Department Detective Michaell Chang, who had been...

    Mario Tama / Getty Images

    Los Angeles Police Department Detective Michaell Chang, who had been in critical condition with COVID-19, elbow bumps his doctor, Dr. Raymond Lee, after being released from Providence St. John's Health Center as family and healthcare workers watch on April 17, 2020 in Santa Monica, California.

  • President Donald Trump speaks with Fox News anchor Bill Hemmer...

    Evan Vucci / AP

    President Donald Trump speaks with Fox News anchor Bill Hemmer during a Fox News virtual town hall at the White House on March 24, 2020.

  • A close up of President Donald J. Trumps notes shows...

    Jabin Botsford/The Washington Post

    A close up of President Donald J. Trumps notes shows where "Corona" was crossed out and replaced with "Chinese" as he speaks with his coronavirus task force in response to the COVID-19 coronavirus pandemic during a briefing in the James S. Brady Press Briefing Room at the White House on March 19, 2020 in Washington, DC.

  • A woman gestures as other people look on from aboard...

    JOSH EDELSON / AFP via Getty Images

    A woman gestures as other people look on from aboard the Grand Princess cruise ship, operated by Princess Cruises, as it maintains a holding pattern about 25 miles off the coast of San Francisco, California on March 8, 2020.

  • Medical personnel take samples from patients at a drive-thru coronavirus...

    Chandan Kanna / Getty-AFP/AFP via Getty Images

    Medical personnel take samples from patients at a drive-thru coronavirus testing lab set up by local community center in West Palm Beach, 75 miles north of Miami, on March 16, 2020.

  • Father Scott Holmer of St. Edward the Confessor Catholic Church...

    Rob Carr / Getty Images

    Father Scott Holmer of St. Edward the Confessor Catholic Church makes the sign of the cross while holding confession in the church parking lot on March 20, 2020, in Bowie, Maryland. Holmer, who sits six feet away from those in cars, holds drive thru confessions daily in the parking lot of the church due to the outbreak of the COVID-19 pandemic.

  • A person is taken on a stretcher into the United...

    David J. Phillip/AP

    A person is taken on a stretcher into the United Memorial Medical Center after going through testing for COVID-19, March 19, 2020, in Houston. People were lined up in their cars in a line that stretched over two miles to be tested in the drive-thru testing for coronavirus.

  • Dr. Jana Cua, left, is swabbed as she is tested...

    Lynne Sladky/AP

    Dr. Jana Cua, left, is swabbed as she is tested for COVID-19 at the Doris Ison Health Centerin Miami on March 18, 2020. The testing is being provided by Community Health of South Florida.

  • Display baskets are nearly empty in the produce section of...

    Matt Rourke/AP

    Display baskets are nearly empty in the produce section of a Walmart in Warrington, Paennsylvania, on March 17, 2020. Concerns over the new coronavirus have led to consumer panic buying of grocery staples in stores across the country.

  • Roman Rajski, right, Patrick Lin, left, and Owen O'Hare, students...

    Zbigniew Bzdak / Chicago Tribune

    Roman Rajski, right, Patrick Lin, left, and Owen O'Hare, students at Loyola University Chicago are moving out of Mertz Hall at the Lake Shore Campus in Chicago on March 13, 2020. Loyola University Chicago is closing dorms and asking students to move out to stop the spread of coronavirus. Students got one week's notice to pack up and make plans to vacate.

  • A 17-year-old who asked not to be named, wears a...

    Jacquelyn Martin/AP

    A 17-year-old who asked not to be named, wears a hazmat suit, gas mask, boots, and gloves as he walks past people holding a sign that says, "you need Jesus" as he and his family from Gaithersburg, Md. walk under cherry blossom trees in full bloom along the tidal basin on March 22, 2020, in Washington. "I'm not worried for me since I'm young," says the 17-year-old, "I'm wearing this in case I come into contact with anyone who is older so that I won't be a threat to them." Sections of the National Mall and tidal basin areas have been closed to vehicular traffic to encourage people to practice social distancing and not visit Washington's iconic cherry blossoms this year due to coronavirus concerns. The trees are in full bloom this week and would traditionally draw a large crowd.

  • Customers wait in line to purchase bottles of hand sanitizer...

    Win McNamee / Getty Images

    Customers wait in line to purchase bottles of hand sanitizer produced by Twin Valley Distillers March 19, 2020 in Rockville, Maryland. The distillery is helping to combat low supplies of hand sanitizer caused by the outbreak of coronavirus by switching their normal production lines of bourbon and rum to hand sanitizer.

  • Stacks of medical supplies are housed at the Jacob Javits...

    John Minchillo / AP

    Stacks of medical supplies are housed at the Jacob Javits Center that will become a temporary hospital in response to the COVID-19 outbreak in New York on March 24, 2020.

  • A woman donates medical supplies to a volunteer as part...

    David Zalubowski/AP

    A woman donates medical supplies to a volunteer as part of an effort staged by two state lawmakers, Project C.U.R.E., Colorado Concern and the Denver Broncos to battle the spread of coronavirus on March 22, 2020, in Denver.

  • While an employee washes her hands, Ron Flexon sits at...

    Jessica McGowan / Getty Images

    While an employee washes her hands, Ron Flexon sits at the counter for dine-in service at the Waffle House on April 27, 2020 in Brookhaven, Georgia. Gov. Brian Kemp has allowed some non-essential businesses to start re-opening in Georgia amid the COVID-19 Pandemic. As of Monday, restaurants around Georgia are allowed to offer dine-in service. Non-essential businesses allowed to start reopening are restaurants, movie theaters, tattoo shops, salons, gyms and nail salons.

  • Shoppers form a line around the side of a Smith's...

    Ethan Miller / Getty Images

    Shoppers form a line around the side of a Smith's Food & Drug as they wait for the store to open on March 20, 2020 in Las Vegas, Nevada. The grocery store chain is reserving the first hour they are open on Mondays, Wednesdays and Fridays for senior citizen shoppers to help them get supplies in light of the coronavirus outbreak.

  • A patient is removed from Life Care Center of Kirkland,...

    Grant Hindsley/The New York Times

    A patient is removed from Life Care Center of Kirkland, a nursing home in Kirkland, Wash., Feb. 29, 2020. The first person in the U.S. to die from the COVID-19 virus had been a patient at a hospital in Kirkland, according to its spokeswoman.

  • Susan Stroud screens a customer at a Witham Health Services...

    Darron Cummings/AP

    Susan Stroud screens a customer at a Witham Health Services drive-through Community Viral Screening center, March 19, 2020, in Whitestown, Ind. Indiana's governor has ordered all public and private schools across the state remain closed to students until at least May 1 among steps aimed at slowing the coronavirus spread.

  • A paradegoer holds a sign of support for Wuhan, China,...

    Craig Ruttle/AP

    A paradegoer holds a sign of support for Wuhan, China, at the center of the coronavirus outbreak, as participants in the Lunar New Year parade pass by in the Chinatown neighborhood of New York on Feb. 9, 2020.

  • A woman walks dogs with a protective mask while a...

    Cindy Ord/Getty Images/Getty Images

    A woman walks dogs with a protective mask while a man inside talks on the phone as the coronavirus continues to spread across the United States on March 24, 2020, in New York City.

  • President Donald Trump leaves the Brady Press Briefing Room after...

    Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

    President Donald Trump leaves the Brady Press Briefing Room after he and members of the White House Coronavirus Task Force held a news conference at the White House March 19, 2020 in Washington, DC.

  • A shopper looks at almost empty shelves for frozen pizzas...

    John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune

    A shopper looks at almost empty shelves for frozen pizzas at a Jewel-Osco store in the Lincoln Park neighborhood on March 16, 2020, in Chicago. Concerns about COVID-19, or coronavirus, has led to high-volume purchases of certain food items, resulting in a shortage at area grocery stores.

  • A counter-protester beats on the hood of a car as...

    Matt Slocum/AP

    A counter-protester beats on the hood of a car as he is pushed back after blocking a drive-by rally to reopen the country and economy outside City Hall in Philadelphia, Friday, May 8, 2020.

  • Nurses and healthcare workers mourn and remember their colleagues who...

    JOHANNES EISELE / AFP via Getty Images

    Nurses and healthcare workers mourn and remember their colleagues who died during the outbreak of the novel coronavirus (which causes COVID-19) during a demonstration outside Mount Sinai Hospital in Manhattan on April 10, 2020 in New York City.

  • A woman in a mask walks past a mural of...

    TIMOTHY A. CLARY/AFP via Getty Images

    A woman in a mask walks past a mural of a hand on the side of a building in Midtown New York City April 22, 2020.

  • A woman with a face mask rides on the subway...

    Angela Weiss/AFP/Getty Images/AFP via Getty Images

    A woman with a face mask rides on the subway on March 17, 2020, in the Brooklyn borough of New York City.

  • A person looks from their window on March 24, 2020...

    Angela Weiss/Getty-AFP

    A person looks from their window on March 24, 2020 in New York City.

  • An aerial drone view of an empty Lombard Street tourist...

    Justin Sullivan / Getty Images

    An aerial drone view of an empty Lombard Street tourist destination during the coronavirus pandemic on March 30, 2020 in San Francisco, California. Officials in seven San Francisco Bay Area counties have announced plans to extend the shelter in place order until May 1.

  • A patient wears a protective face mask as she is...

    John Minchillo/AP

    A patient wears a protective face mask as she is loaded into an ambulance at The Brooklyn Hospital Center emergency room on March 18, 2020, in New York. Anticipating a spike in coronavirus patients, New York City-area hospitals are clearing out beds, setting up new spaces to triage patients and urging people with mild symptoms to consult health professionals by phone or video chat instead of flooding emergency rooms that could be overrun.

  • Mike Lohse and Denise Asher have lunch at Schoop's Hamburgers...

    Zbigniew Bzdak / Chicago Tribune

    Mike Lohse and Denise Asher have lunch at Schoop's Hamburgers which opened to dine in customers in Valparaiso, Indiana, May 11, 2020.

  • A man wears a face mask in New York's Times...

    John Taggart/The New York Times

    A man wears a face mask in New York's Times Square, March 2, 2020. New York officials warned on Monday that the coronavirus was likely to spread in New York City, a day after confirming that a Manhattan woman had contracted the virus while traveling in Iran and was now isolated in her home.

  • A single rider waits on a train platform at the...

    Chip Somodevilla / Getty Images

    A single rider waits on a train platform at the Archives station as weekday rail ridership across the Metro system is down nearly 90-percent due to the coronavirus pandemic, March 25, 2020, in Washington, DC. The Washington Metropolitan Area Transit Authority is closing more than a dozen stations for an indefinite period beginning March 26.

  • Andrew Fink photographs Baylor University graduate Cady Malachowski at the...

    Matt York / AP

    Andrew Fink photographs Baylor University graduate Cady Malachowski at the Grand Canyon Friday, May 15, 2020, in Grand Canyon, Arizona.

  • A person is silhouetted against a reflection on the water...

    Charlie Riedel / AP

    A person is silhouetted against a reflection on the water while fishing at Clinton Reservoir on Sunday, April 26, 2020, near Lawrence, Kan. Fishing and hunting are still allowed activities in Kansas as the state continues to be under stay-at-home orders in an attempt to stem the spread of the coronavirus.

  • Owner Justin Chaillou cuts the hair of Crime Enforcement Detective Sgt. Steve Dulski of the...

    Patrick Smith / Getty Images

    Owner Justin Chaillou cuts the hair of Crime Enforcement Detective Sgt. Steve Dulski of the Maryland State Police, at an empty Old Line Barbers on April 24, 2020 in Bel Air, Maryland. This week, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan issued new guidelines to his stay home order and closure of non-essential businesses, stating essential employees could receive haircuts at barbershops during the coronavirus pandemic. This service is only for employees whom are considered essential during COVID-19 - and whose jobs require grooming standards. Barbers must adhere to strict bylaws including: only taking scheduled appointments, serving only one client at a time, wearing a mask, and acknowledging written documentation from customers employees grooming standards prior to service.

  • President Donald Trump speaks during the daily briefing of the...

    Alex Wong / Getty Images

    President Donald Trump speaks during the daily briefing of the White House Coronavirus Task Force in the briefing room at the White House April 16, 2020 in Washington, DC.

  • Caskets of Muslims who have passed away from the coronavirus...

    Spencer Platt / Getty Images

    Caskets of Muslims who have passed away from the coronavirus are prepared for burial at a busy Brooklyn funeral home on the first day of Ramadan on April 24, 2020 in New York City. Like the majority of New York City funeral homes, services that deal with the dead in New York's Muslim communities have been overwhelmed with the large number of deceased. Around the world, Muslims are preparing to observe the holy month of Ramadan under severe restrictions caused by the coronavirus outbreak.

  • A man plays tennis on 42nd Street on April 11,...

    Johannes Eisele/Getty-AFP

    A man plays tennis on 42nd Street on April 11, 2020 in New York City.

  • Medical workers remove a body from a refrigerated truck outside...

    Stephanie Keith / Getty Images

    Medical workers remove a body from a refrigerated truck outside of the Brooklyn Hospital on March 31, 2020 in New York, United States. Due to a surge in deaths caused by the Coronavirus, hospitals are using refrigerated trucks as make shift morgues.

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As the first alarms sounded in early January that an outbreak of a novel coronavirus in China might ignite a global pandemic, the Trump administration squandered nearly two months that could have been used to bolster the federal stockpile of critically needed medical supplies and equipment.

A review of federal purchasing contracts by The Associated Press shows federal agencies largely waited until mid-March to begin placing bulk orders of N95 respirator masks, mechanical ventilators and other equipment needed by front-line health care workers.

By that time, hospitals in several states were treating thousands of infected patients without adequate equipment and were pleading for shipments from the Strategic National Stockpile. That federal cache of supplies was created more than 20 years ago to help bridge gaps in the medical and pharmaceutical supply chains during a national emergency.

Now, three months into the crisis, that stockpile is nearly drained just as the numbers of patients needing critical care is surging. Some state and local officials report receiving broken ventilators and decade-old dry-rotted masks.

“We basically wasted two months,” Kathleen Sebelius, health and human services secretary during the Obama administration, told AP.

As early as mid-January, U.S. officials could see that hospitals in China’s Hubei province were overwhelmed with infected patients, with many left dependent on ventilator machines to breathe. Italy soon followed, with hospitals scrambling for doctors, beds and equipment.

HHS did not respond to questions about why federal officials waited to order medical supplies until stocks were running critically low. But President Donald Trump has asserted that the federal government should take a back seat to states when it comes to dealing with the pandemic.

Trump and his appointees have urged state and local governments, and hospitals, to buy their own masks and breathing machines, saying requests to the dwindling national stockpile should be a last resort.

“The notion of the federal stockpile was it’s supposed to be our stockpile,” Jared Kushner, the president’s son-in-law and adviser, said at a White House briefing Thursday. “It’s not supposed to be state stockpiles that they then use.”

Stacks of medical supplies are housed at the Jacob Javits Center that will become a temporary hospital in response to the COVID-19 outbreak in New York on March 24, 2020.
Stacks of medical supplies are housed at the Jacob Javits Center that will become a temporary hospital in response to the COVID-19 outbreak in New York on March 24, 2020.

Experts in emergency preparedness and response have expressed dismay at such statements, saying the federal government must take the lead in ensuring medical supplies are available and distributed where they are needed most.

“States do not have the purchasing power of the federal government. They do not have the ability to run a deficit like the federal government. They do not have the logistical power of the federal government,” said Sebelius, who served as governor of Kansas before serving as the nation’s top health care official.

Because of the fractured federal response to COVID-19, state governors say they’re now bidding against federal agencies and each other for scarce supplies, driving up prices.

“You now literally will have a company call you up and say, ‘Well, California just outbid you,'” Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo, D-N.Y., said Tuesday. “It’s like being on eBay with 50 other states, bidding on a ventilator.”

For nearly a month, Trump rebuffed calls from Cuomo and others to use his authority under the Defense Production Act to order companies to increase production of ventilators and personal protective equipment. He suggested the private sector was acting sufficiently on its own.

More than three months after China revealed the first COVID-19 cases, Trump finally relented last week, saying he will order companies to ramp up production of critical supplies. By then, confirmed cases of COVID-19 within the United States had surged to the highest in the world. Now, the number of people infected in the U.S. has climbed to more than 312,000 and deaths have topped 8,500.

Trump spent January and February playing down the threat from the new virus. He derided warnings of pandemic reaching the U.S. as a hoax perpetrated by Democrats and the media. As the World Health Organization declared the outbreak a global public health emergency on Jan. 30, Trump assured the American people that the virus was “very well under control” and he predicted “a very good ending.”

His administration was so confident that Secretary of State Mike Pompeo announced on Feb. 7 that the government had airlifted nearly 18 tons of donated respirator masks, surgical masks, gowns and other medical supplies to China.

On Feb. 24, the White House sent Congress an initial $2.5 billion funding request to address the coronavirus outbreak. The next day, federal health experts at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention warned that the virus was spreading quickly in the U.S. and predicted that disruptions to daily life could be “severe,” including school and business closures.

Unfazed, HHS Secretary Alex Azar told lawmakers on Feb. 27 that “the immediate risk to the American public remains low.”

During those crucial early weeks when the U.S. could have been tracking the spread of the disease and containing it, hardly anyone was being tested after a series of federal blunders led to a shortage of tests and testing capacity, as AP reported last month.

Without data showing how widespread the disease was, federal and state governments failed to prepare.

By the middle of March, hospitals in New York, Seattle and New Orleans were reporting a surge in sick patients. Doctors and nurses took to social media to express their alarm at dwindling supplies of such basic equipment as masks and gowns.

Trump accused some Democratic governors of exaggerating the need and derided those that criticized the federal response as complainers and snakes.

“I want them to be appreciative,” Trump said on March 27.

At the start of the crisis, an HHS spokeswoman said the Strategic National Stockpile had about 13 million N95 respirator masks, which filter out about 95% of all liquid or airborne particles and are critical to prevent health care workers from becoming infected. That’s just a small fraction of what hospitals need to protect their workers, who normally would wear a new mask for each patient, but who now are often issued only one to last for days.

Trump during a White House briefing on March 26 claimed that he had inherited an “empty shelf” from the Obama administration, but added that “we’re really filling it up, and we fill it up rapidly.”

Federal purchasing records, however, show the Trump administration delayed making big orders for additional supplies until the virus had taken root and was spreading.

HHS first announced its intent to purchase 500 million N95 masks on March 4, with plans to distribute them over the next 18 months. The following day, Congress passed an $8.3 billion coronavirus spending bill, more than three times what the White House had originally asked for.

Eight days later, on March 13, Trump declared the outbreak a national emergency. That was almost six weeks after the WHO’s action. By then, thousands of U.S. schools had closed, the National Basketball Association had put its season on temporary hiatus and there were 1,700 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in the country.

The government had already sent tens of thousands of masks, gloves and gowns from the stockpile to Washington state, which was hit early with a coronavirus outbreak. But state officials even then said the supplies weren’t enough.

Federal contracting records show that HHS had made an initial order March 12 for $4.8 million of N95 masks from 3M, the largest U.S.-based manufacturer, which had ramped up production weeks earlier in response to the pandemic. HHS followed up with a larger $173 million order on March 21, but those contracts don’t require 3M to start making deliveries to the national stockpile until the end of April. That’s after the White House has projected the pandemic will reach its peak.

On Thursday, Trump threatened in a tweet to “hit 3M hard” through a Defense Production Act order, saying the company “will have a big price to pay!” He gave no specifics.

HHS declined this past week to say how many N95 masks it has on hand. But as of March 31, the White House said more than 11.6 million had been distributed to state and local governments from the national stockpile — about 90% of what was available at the start of the year.

Dr. Robert Kadlec, the assistant secretary for preparedness and response at HHS, testified before Congress last month that the country would need roughly 3.5 billion N-95 respirators to get through the pandemic, but the national supply chain then had just about 1% of that amount.

Greg Burel, director of the Strategic National Stockpile from 2007 until his retirement at the start of this year, said the cache was only ever intended to serve as a short-term “bridge-stock.”

The stockpile was created in 1999 to prevent supply-chain disruptions for the predicted Y2K computer problems. It expanded after 9/11 to prepare for chemical, biological, radiological and nuclear attacks. Congress provided money in 2006 to prepare for a potential influenza pandemic, though Burel said much of that stock was used during the H1N1 flu outbreak three years later.

“There’s never enough money to buy everything that we want to see on those shelves,” said Burel, who stressed the stockpile uses its annual funding to prepare for a wide array of potential threats.

“Most of the time, commercially available products like masks can be bought in quantity at the time of an event.”

This time, it hasn’t worked out that way. As AP reported last month, much of the world’s supply of N95 masks and other basic medical supplies is made in China, the first nation hit by COVID-19. As a result, the Chinese government required its producers to reserve N95 respirators for domestic use. China resumed exports of the precious masks only in recent days.

Experts are now worried the U.S. will also soon exhaust its supply of ventilators, which can cost upward of $12,000 each.

The White House said Tuesday that it had already distributed nearly half the breathing machines in the stockpile, which at the beginning of March had 16,660; some of them dated back to the flurry of post-9/11 purchasing. An additional 2,425 were out for maintenance.

Cuomo said New York may need as many as 40,000 ventilators to deal with the outbreak that is already overwhelming hospitals there.

Throughout March, governors and mayors of big cities urged Trump to use his authority under the Defense Production Act to direct private companies to ramp up production of ventilators. It wasn’t until last week that Trump finally said he would use that power to order General Motors to begin manufacturing ventilators — work the company had already announced was underway.

The federal government had made an effort to prepare for a surge in the need for ventilators, but it was allowed to languish. Since 2014, HHS has paid a private company, Respironics Inc., $13.8 million to develop a cheaper, less complicated ventilator that could be bought in bulk to replenish the national stockpile. In September, HHS placed a $32.8 million order with the Dutch-owned company for 10,000 of the new model, set for delivery by 2022, federal contracts show.

Respironics’ parent company, Royal Philips, said it’s planning to double U.S. production of ventilators to 2,000 a week by the end of May.

Steve Klink, a spokesman for Royal Philips in Amsterdam, said the company is now focused on producing its other commercial models and will deliver the first ventilators to the national stockpile by August, long after the White House projects COVID-19 cases will peak.

Trump, who pledged on March 27 that his administration would ensure that 100,000 additional ventilators would be made available “within 100 days,” said on Thursday that he’ll use the Defense Production Act to order Respironics and other ventilator makers to step up production.

It’s not clear that Trump’s order would translate into the 100,000 new ventilators he promised. In a House Oversight and Reform Committee briefing last week, top Federal Emergency Management Agency officials hedged, saying 100,000 ventilators would be available by late June “at the earliest.”

Cuomo predicted on Friday that New York would run out within days. With coronavirus deaths in his state surging, the governor vowed to use his authority to seize ventilators, masks and protective gear from private hospitals that aren’t utilizing them.

Meanwhile, federal health authorities are lowering standards.

New guidance from the Food and Drug Administration allows hospitals to use emergency ventilators typically used in ambulances and anesthesia gas machines in place of standard ventilators. The agency also said nightstand CPAP machines used to treat sleep apnea and snoring could also be used to keep coronavirus patients breathing, as a last resort.

The CDC advised health care workers last month to use homemade masks or bandanas if they run out of proper gear. Across the country, hospitals have issued urgent pleas for volunteers who know how to sew.

President Trump provided his own input, suggesting that Americans without access to factory-produced masks could cover their faces with scarves.

“A scarf is highly recommended by the professionals,” Trump said during a White House briefing Wednesday. “And I think, in a certain way, depending on the fabric — I think, in a certain way, a scarf is better. It’s actually better.”

Associated Press writers John Hanna in Topeka, Kansas, and Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar contributed.