Friday, August 06, 2021

CRONY CAPITALI$M
DHS watchdog to blame data management for rocky PPE distribution: report


Jordan Williams 
The Hill 


A forthcoming report from the Department of Homeland Security's (DHS) watchdog is expected to blame data management for the Federal Emergency Management Agency's (FEMA) rocky distribution of personal protective equipment (PPE) early in the coronavirus pandemic.

The report is expected from DHS Inspector General Joseph Cuffari, who was appointed by former President Trump, according to a draft obtained by NBC News.

In the report Cuffari says the "magnitude" of the pandemic "exposed weaknesses in FEMA's resource request system and allocation processes."


"Specifically, WebEOC - the system FEMA used to process PPE and ventilator resource requests - contained unreliable data to inform allocation decisions and ensure requests were accurately adjudicated," he wrote, according to NBC. "In addition, although FEMA developed a process to allocate the limited supply of ventilators, it did not have a similar process for PPE."

According to NBC, the report recommends that the agency develop "internal controls for WebEOC to prevent incomplete, inaccurate, and duplicate information from being entered into the system" and better train users.

It further advises that FEMA should document how decisions are made for allocating "critical lifesaving supplies and equipment."

The report further says FEMA should better define its role, and that of the Department of Health and Human Services, when both have to respond to a pandemic.

THE JARED PHENOM

NBC noted that officials with the White House coronavirus task force were charged with acquiring and distributing PPE resources, and often officials circumvented FEMA's decision-making to award contracts for PPE and other equipment to preferred states and companies.

While the report doesn't address political factors, it does mention troubles FEMA had in explaining decisions made by political appointees working in a "Unified Coordination Group," which could overturn the agency's recommendations.

The report also notes that states and private entities asking FEMA for help were left in the dark about decision making, and that the agency was unable to accurately track requests.


The repot covered by NBC did not include FEMA's responses to the findings.

The Hill has reached out to FEMA for comment

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