Earlier today, President @realDonaldTrump met with Governor Cuomo to discuss his statewide testing strategy. pic.twitter.com/LCVETkIN0p— The White House (@WhiteHouse) April 21, 2020
Following Meeting With President Trump, Governor Cuomo
Announces Partnership With Federal Government
to Double Testing Capacity in New York State
Announces Partnership With Federal Government
to Double Testing Capacity in New York State
April 21, 2020
[source: NY State Governor Cuomo]
Governor Cuomo: "Testing is the best way to inform and educate yourself as you go through the reopening process so you can watch not just hospitalizations ... but also testing so you can look at the infection rate across the state and see how the infection rate is increasing."
Cuomo: "To quantify that situation in the State of New York, we now do, on average, about 20,000 tests per day. ... our goal is to double the 20,000 to get to 40,000 tests per day. We need several weeks to ramp up to that, but it is a very aggressive goal. ... That's our goal and it was a very productive conversation."
Cuomo: "To have a real progress you have to sit down and go through the various steps of testing and actually decide who does what and that's what we did this afternoon. We agreed that the state government should be responsible for managing the actual tests in their own laboratories."
Cuomo: "The problem with testing and bringing testing up to scale has been the national manufacturers of the equipment who make the testing kits that they have to send to the state labs so the state labs can actually perform them. Those are done by national manufacturers. The national manufacturers have said they have a problem with the supply chain to quickly ramp up those tests. ... That is where the federal government can help. ... Let the federal government take responsibility for that federal supply chain for the national manufacturers. That's what we agreed in this meeting."
A rush transcript of the Governor's remarks is available below:
Good evening - night shift. To my right Gareth Rhodes; to my immediate right Jim Malatras; to my left Melissa DeRosa; and Rob Mujica to her left.
We had a meeting at the White House this afternoon and it was very productive and it was positive and we got a lot done.
I've been talking for a number of days as have most governors about testing as the next phase that we have to enter into. We're starting to talk about reopening and planning reopening.
Everyone is obviously concerned about how you reopen and if you reopen in a way that is too rushed and you're not prepared you could actually see the infection rate go up which is the last thing that anybody wants. Testing is the best way to inform and educate yourself as you go through the reopening process so you can watch not just hospitalizations - which we'll have that data - but also testing so you can look at the infection rate across the state and see how the infection rate is increasing.
Also, testing for employees who want to go back, employers who want to know whether or not the employees are actually negative of the virus. Testing has been a very big task to undertake. There's also been a lot of back and forth between the states, my state included, and the federal government about who does what on testing and who is responsible.
I said this morning that I think in many ways people are just talking past each other because the federal government is helping on testing and states are responsible for testing but testing is a very complicated issue with a lot of levels. To have a real progress you have to sit down and go through the various steps of testing and actually decide who does what and that's what we did this afternoon.
We agreed that the state government should be responsible for managing the actual tests in their own laboratories. We have about 300 laboratories in the State of New York. We regulate those laboratories. It's up to a state to determine how many tests, where those tests should be done, New York City versus Buffalo versus Long Island, et cetera, the staff to do those tests, how often you do the tests - those should all be state decisions and state responsibilities.
The antibody test, which is one of the tests, how do you use those, when - that should all be up to the states.
The tracing function - that is the function after testing that actually traces people who are positive, who did they come in contact with, to isolate them - that's all the state's responsibility.
The problem with testing and bringing testing up to scale has been the national manufacturers of the equipment who make the testing kits that they have to send to the state labs so the state labs can actually perform them. Those are done by national manufacturers. The national manufacturers have said they have a problem with the supply chain to quickly ramp up those tests. They need swabs, they need vials and they need chemicals, quote, unquote reagents.
That is where the federal government can help. States cannot do international supply chains. I guess they could, but not in this time frame and it's not what we do. You shouldn't have 50 states competing to do international supply chains. One of my colleagues, Governor Hogan the Chairman of the National Governor's Association who is the Governor of Maryland - Republican, good man - he was bringing tests in from South Korea. Very creative and proactive on his part, but that's not what state's normally do. Let the federal government take responsibility for that federal supply chain for the national manufacturers. That's what we agreed in this meeting.
That is an intelligent division of labor, in my opinion. Let each level of government do what it does best and it ends this back and forth, what do the states do, what does Washington do, who's responsible, et cetera.
To quantify that situation in the State of New York, we now do, on average, about 20,000 tests per day. Our goal, which is very aggressive and ambitious but set it high and then try, our goal is to double the 20,000 to get to 40,000 tests per day. We need several weeks to ramp up to that, but it is a very aggressive goal. That is our current system at maximum. Our current laboratory system, 7-days-a-week, 24-hours-a-day. The maximum our system, as it exists, can do is that number. That's our goal and it was a very productive conversation. Again, that is the biggest single task we have to do that is identifiable from today. It ends the whole back and forth and the finger pointing in a very fair and smart way. It's a smart resolution so I feel very good about that. If we could double our tests that would be a home run. That is a really, really big deal.
We also talked about funding to the states. The legislation that the Congress passed did not have funding for the states. It passed additional money for small business and that's great and we need that and that's a positive, but it did not fund state governments, which to me is just a mistake, frankly. Fund small businesses, fund airlines, but you don't fund police, you don't fund fire, you don't fund healthcare workers, you don't fund teachers, you don't fund schools, you cut the aid to schools in this state. You know the state governments are broke, to use a very blunt term. You know the state governments are now responsible for the reopening and the governors are going to do the reopening, and they have no funds to do it. So, we talked about that, the President said he understood the issue and that he would work very hard to get funding for the states in the next piece of legislation that passes. And we hope there is another piece of legislation.
I also told the President, from my parochial point of view, we had a conversation with Secretary Mnuchin and the President, that there is a match. What's called a local match for FEMA funding. When the FEMA does something, the local government should match that funding by twenty five percent. I said to the President there is no way New York can pay that match because we don't have the funding period and it is disproportionate to New York, because we've had such a much larger number of cases than any other state in the United States. That it falls disproportionately on New York, which disproportionately is dealing with this crisis in the first place. We get all the hardship and then we get a bill because we had the hardship. Makes absolutely no sense and as a practical matter we couldn't pay it anyway. The President said he understood and that he would work to waive the local match. Secretary Mnuchin said he understood. Secretary Mnuchin was very supportive and I thank him for his support and the President said that he understood and that he would take care of it and I believe that he will, because he did understand it and that's a big deal for the state of New York.
Again, the incongruity the state that had the most pain and death should get a bill because they endured pain and death. I mean it makes no sense. So, that was a lot and it was complicated, but vitally important and the resolution was good across the board.
We met not just with the President, but with members of his team because a lot of this is granular and detailed and if you don't work out the details there is no conceptual agreement, right? It has to be on the details, so people actually know what we're agreeing to and it was on that level. So, I thank all the people on the President's team who made themselves available and work this through with us in detail and it's a really positive, positive resolution.
#Covid19 ICU admissions in NY as a % of hospitalizations 2 days earlier, drop from 63% to 14%. Cannot be attributed to social distancing but only more effective treatments. Namely more widespread #hydroxychloriquine usage. Anecdotal? @raoult_didier @niro60487270 pic.twitter.com/PDlQTC4Wir— MDT (@MTsalidis) April 8, 2020
Gov. Cuomo: "All the predictions over the last couple of weeks/months by all the experts have turned out to be wrong. And that is good news. ... So, in terms of when to open schools/businesses, I am just going to listen to the experts."— Bansi Sharma (@bansisharma) April 12, 2020
This is what happens when pols talk.
So all of the experts were wrong but I am still going to listen to them ๐คจ— Man Behind Curtain (@ManBehindCurta1) April 12, 2020
Hey whooer - Cuomo admitted on Wednesday that NY has 14,000 ventilators stockpiled throughout the state. AND that not a single hospital has asked him for one. pic.twitter.com/kyh3GKtmV1— Lindy R. Urso, Attorney at Law (@AttorneyUrso) March 27, 2020
Democrat hero Cuomo was fine demanding 30,000 ventilators to the detriment of the other 49 states when he had several thousand stockpiled.— lasertrout (@LasertroutMedia) April 16, 2020
Such is the life of the liberal media hero. https://t.co/JUWvvBKDP3
And that is EXACTLY what CUOMO was doing! Did you MISS it when they found 14,000 ventilators Cuomo had in a warehouse "stockpiled" while he demanded 40,000 more. He didn't give a crap about any other state. He wanted a BIGGER STOCKPILE. At avg of $30,000 a piece!— Merkabah3 **DO NOT SHAKE HANDS**WASH HANDS** (@Merkabah31) April 20, 2020
It appears that Gov. Cuomo did not actually need 30,000 ventilators. From today's perspective, if NY has passed peak need for ventilators, how many did it, in fact, need when Cuomo made that statement?— Byron York (@ByronYork) April 15, 2020
Dr. Ahmed in NY: “Our Governor and our President have done a tremendous job filling our hospitals with additional ventilators. We probably doubled our capacity of mechanical ventilators because of the Administration and because of Governor Cuomo and President Trump.” pic.twitter.com/VUuOViWtCq— Benny (@bennyjohnson) April 20, 2020
Gov. Andrew Cuomo says New York is giving ventilators to Michigan and Maryland.— Cheddar๐ง (@cheddar) April 15, 2020
“When you need help, we will be there for you.”#CheddarLive pic.twitter.com/7NUU5pvUrs
Today, New York is sending 100 ventilators to New Jersey–a lifesaving tool in our fight against #COVID19.— Governor Phil Murphy (@GovMurphy) April 16, 2020
Grateful to @NYGovCuomo and the people of New York. Our states are now the epicenter of this pandemic. Our partnership is saving lives, and we will beat this virus together.
NY Gov. Cuomo says Massachusetts may need 400 ventilators due to an increase of COVID-19 cases, and responds by saying "we're going to be there for you."https://t.co/q3zuThrV7f— MSNBC (@MSNBC) April 19, 2020
There are ONLY 110 patients between the USS Comfort and the Javits Center in NYC.— Tim Young (@TimRunsHisMouth) April 9, 2020
New York admitted just 200 people total to the hospital yesterday - the lowest since March 18 - They have stopped reporting discharges, which have FAR EXCEEDED admitted patients since March 31.
Just a friendly reminder that we were told that "flattening the curve" meant making sure hospitals werent overrun... not keeping everyone locked in their houses until the virus no longer existed.— Tim Young (@TimRunsHisMouth) April 22, 2020
Oh and that 'hospital overrun' curve has been flattened for a while now.
So @NYGovCuomo has reported ICU patients and discharges for weeks. Not today. Just new hospitalizations - which are now 2/5 what they were a week ago - and deaths (a lagging indicator, as he said). I wonder why. And, oh yeah, a promise NY won’t go back to normal anytime soon. pic.twitter.com/XkAs8X3XbL— Alex Berenson (@AlexBerenson) April 8, 2020
Here, btw, is current real-time hospital data for New Jersey - which should trail only NY as a state affected by the NYC crisis. 2 of the state’s 72 hospitals are “on diversion,” meaning they can’t take patients. One other is on critical care diversion. Everywhere else has beds. pic.twitter.com/9MFH5xn1F8— Alex Berenson (@AlexBerenson) April 8, 2020
Governors of New York and New Jersey, whose states together have more virus cases than any non-US country, are resisting question of whether they could have saved lives by shutting things down earlier. Just won't go there. 1/3— Byron York (@ByronYork) April 12, 2020
Baldly put, NY/NJ argument is that governors couldn't have shut things down earlier without a sufficient public fear level. If there weren't enough cases to make people afraid, then public would have scoffed at, ignored shutdown orders. 2/3— Byron York (@ByronYork) April 12, 2020
Cuomo was just asked if NY was late to act in virus crisis. 'No, no, I think New York was early, and I think the actions that we took were more dramatic than most.' https://t.co/VcyONAgZLg— Byron York (@ByronYork) April 8, 2020
In powerful show of defiance of #coronavirus scare, huge crowds gathering in NYC's Chinatown for ceremony ahead of annual #LunarNewYear parade. Chants of "be strong Wuhan!"— Mark D. Levine (@MarkLevineNYC) February 9, 2020
If you are staying away, you are missing out! pic.twitter.com/NGBUAfHWpl
"We have a fear pandemic. The fear factor is way ahead of the facts of dealing with this disease and the fear factor... has to be managed."— CNN Newsroom (@CNNnewsroom) March 3, 2020
- @NYGovCuomo reacts as a second coronavirus case is confirmed in New York state.https://t.co/FTGpzITE3m pic.twitter.com/1rUBT5b4YY
3/24 - Emperor Cuomo to Trump— Apparatcheck (@apparatcheck) April 15, 2020
“You pick the 26,000 people who are going to die,”
Complete joke. https://t.co/JcZZkRQIgK
Waiting for Cuomo to apologize for hyperventilating about choosing who should die.— Joe Biden's Hologram (@eastern_ont) April 13, 2020
We here "You pick the 26,000 that will die" about 50 times a day on Australian TV. ๐คฌ— Clem (@oz_clem) April 14, 2020
This is how NY Governor Cuomo was handling the coronavirus (COVID19) two weeks ago. ๐ https://t.co/l15t2s6QwI— Global Awareness 101 (@Mononoke__Hime) March 25, 2020
I C YouTube scrubbed the original news conference with Comm. Bardot and Mayor DeBlasio.— ๐ช๐ป ๐บ๐ธ BJ ๐บ๐ธ ๐ช๐ป (@BJLieDetector) March 30, 2020
How come @jaketapper @chucktodd @CNN are not asking if these 2 have blood on their hands
NYC Health Commissioner Barbot Says Party On! on Feb 2nd 2020 https://t.co/BvNHm38VEv via @YouTube
As we gear up to celebrate the #LunarNewYear in NYC, I want to assure New Yorkers that there is no reason for anyone to change their holiday plans, avoid the subway, or certain parts of the city because of #coronavirus. pic.twitter.com/r4gNWklGPX— Commissioner Oxiris Barbot (@NYCHealthCommr) February 2, 2020
I want to be clear, this is about a virus, not a group of people. There is NO excuse for anyone to discriminate or stigmatize people of Asian heritage. We are here today to urge all New Yorkers to continue to live their lives as usual.— Commissioner Oxiris Barbot (@NYCHealthCommr) February 2, 2020
.@BilldeBlasio is shown a montage of his own words where he urges New Yorkers to go on with life normally as recently as two weeks ago. pic.twitter.com/akIryKSyjm— Andy Ngo (@MrAndyNgo) March 29, 2020
This was NYC Mayor March 2nd. ๐ https://t.co/SY0meI0vFV— Global Awareness 101 (@Mononoke__Hime) April 20, 2020
Mayor Bill de Blasio is shocked . .— Lawyerforlaws (@lawyer4laws) April 20, 2020
When realizes Criminals are Criminals! ๐คฃ๐คฃ
“I think it’s unconscionable just on a human level that folks were shown mercy and this is what some of them have done,” the mayor said during his morning briefing Monday.https://t.co/j5vTd3ViqB
How do you report places that aren’t enforcing social distancing? It’s simple: just snap a photo and text it to 311-692. #AskMyMayor pic.twitter.com/WQdCcVf1Rl— Mayor Bill de Blasio (@NYCMayor) April 18, 2020
De Blasio: churches and synagogues that hold worship services may be closed permanently pic.twitter.com/kdUsdbP2YO— Matthew Schmitz (@matthewschmitz) March 29, 2020
Mayor Bill de Blasio defends going to the gym: "This would be the last chance to get some exercise. I got no exercise whatsoever over the weekend. I was in this building a huge percentage of the time. I need exercise to be able to stay healthy and make decisions." pic.twitter.com/abwvcmOe5d— The Hill (@thehill) March 16, 2020
For more information for NYC COVID-19 data I shared above CLICK HERE
Dr. Zelenko a board-certified family practitioner in NY has treated 1,450 coronavirus patients with 99.99% success using a cocktail of hydroxychloroquine, Zinc Sulfate & Azithromycin.— Global Awareness 101 (@Mononoke__Hime) April 22, 2020
His out-patient treatment regimen, which costs only $12 is as follows:https://t.co/uV0UsYY0dV
He shut it down and now wants America to bail out his state with $ billions of federal gov money. Democratic Governors got together and want $500,000,000,000 to bail out their unprepared states. Cuomo didn't buy 16000 ventilators for $500 M but spent $750M on solar Co that failed— Mike Bartlett (@USA1LandofFree) April 19, 2020
UPDATE 4/22/20 at 3:06pm: Added info below.Typical Cuomo. He didn’t need that many ventilators. He didn’t need the hospital ship. Then he blames the fed government and destroys the state economy by extending lockdown which other NY cities don’t need. Next step? Raise state tax.— MercuryWhisker (@MercuryWhisker) April 18, 2020
The Federal Government will staff and equip 2,500 beds in Javits for COVID patients.— Andrew Cuomo (@NYGovCuomo) April 4, 2020
This is a dramatic help in our battle against time, spread and lacking hospital capacity.
Reducing the strain on NYC area hospitals is a top priority.
What total NONSENSE!!!— Michael Zocchi (@mikezocchi123) April 22, 2020
If not for the president and the federal government building hospitals out of the Javits center and making thousands of ventilators and bringing a military hospital ship and having millions of PPE made Cuomo would be in a hole !!! Facts!!! pic.twitter.com/gTzZzdWc00
Give me a break! Trump, his task force & the fed govt have given New York, 4M N95 RESPIRATORS, 1.8M SURGICAL MASKS, 460K FACE SHIELDS, 1.4M GLOVES AND 4,400 VENTILATORS, a hospital at the Javits center, and a Navy ship that holds 1,000-& all Cuomo does is complain!— anonvoice (@anonvoice4) April 5, 2020
UPDATE 4/22/20 at 4:50pm: Added info below.Gov. Cuomo seems 2 b a whiny child— Ronald Lynn Kraus (@KrausLynn) April 18, 2020
The hospital ship he got with few beds being used !!
Javits Center with 1700 beds with 44 in use !
Need 30,000 ventilators
Using only 10,000
states r supposed 2 support themselves
Fed Gov. is defense, Federal highways etc @AnthonyDiComo
A reporter asked Gov. Cuomo what he’d say to New Yorkers who want to go back to work because they’re running out of money, to which he replied, “economic hardship doesn’t equal death”— CBS News (@CBSNews) April 22, 2020
“You want to go to work? Go take a job as an essential worker” he added https://t.co/BgwoOZsQRy pic.twitter.com/WxGQxtg49p
A) "You want to go to work? Go take a job as an essential worker" sure sounds like he's telling out-of-work people it's their own fault they're out of work— Peter J. Hasson (@peterjhasson) April 22, 2020
B) "Economic hardship tied to increase in U.S. suicide rates, especially in rural areas" https://t.co/UWpW3bhgAf https://t.co/rK4yXu7gzJ
Meanwhile, as @NYGovCuomo laments the fact that death is worse than suicide from economic ruin, his Health Department is literally telling paramedics not to perform CPR on people. A Do Not Resuscitate order for the entire state. https://t.co/O7MIesjeOj— Rusty Weiss ๐บ๐ธ (@rustyweiss74) April 22, 2020
UPDATE 4/22/20 at 6:26pm: Added info below.Is @realDonaldTrump aware that 'blood on his hands' @NYGovCuomo has given Emergency Rescue teams -do not resuscitate orders-DNR's- for anyone having a heart attack- blaming LACK OF BEDS/COVID? Cuomo never used all the beds/vents Trump set up for him. https://t.co/UwBwOAuHiU— MNMVR (@repMNM) April 22, 2020
NEW: New York will launch a testing/tracing program in unison with CT and NJ.— Andrew Cuomo (@NYGovCuomo) April 22, 2020
Mayor @MikeBloomberg has volunteered to help us develop the program.
I thank him for taking this on with us — it will be expensive, challenging & require an army of tracers.
But it must be done.
New York is in need. But New Yorkers can rely on one another.— Mike Bloomberg (@MikeBloomberg) April 22, 2020
And they can rely on @NYGovCuomo.
I'm glad to announce that @BloombergDotOrg is committing to partner with New York State to build a contact tracing program. #NewYorkToughhttps://t.co/0nvtFJC2m7
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