US to seize exports of masks and gloves amid coronavirus crisis
Thursday, 9th April 2020
The US will seize exports of essential protective medical gear until it determines whether the equipment should be kept within the country to fight the spread of the new coronavirus, two federal agencies declared on Wednesday.
US Customs and Border Protection (CBP) will hold exports of respirators, surgical masks and surgical gloves, in step with an official statement made with the Federal Emergency Management Agency. FEMA will then determine if the equipment should be returned to be used within the US, purchased by the United States or exported.
President Donald Trump issued a notice on Friday that directed federal agencies to use any authority necessary to keep the highly sought-after medical supplies within the united states.
Governors, mayors and physicians have voiced alarm for weeks over crippling scarcities of private protective gear for first-responders and front-line healthcare workers, furthermore as ventilators and additional medical supplies.
The transit to seize exports will include N95 respirator masks, which purify airborne particles and are accustomed to protecting against COVID-19, the possibly lethal respiratory illness caused by the new coronavirus.
The US manufacturing company 3M Co, a number one producer of the masks worldwide, said on Monday that it had reached a cope with the Trump administration that will allow it to still export the masks to Canada and Latin America despite the new limitations. The corporate had said days earlier that ceasing exports to those regions would have “humanitarian implications.”
A federal regulation that outlines FEMA’s procedures for seizing and vetting the exports will enter effect on Friday and remain in situ until Aug. 10, in step with a draft version posted online.
FEMA will aim to create decisions about exports quickly and seek to attenuate interruptions to the availability chain, the draft regulation said.
Some state and local administration have blamed FEMA in recent days of seizing shipments of masks and other supplies coming from overseas.
An official with the US Department of Homeland Security who demanded anonymity to discuss the matter earlier this week said 1/2 the protective gear dropped at the United States on US government flights is redirected to high-need areas around the country, but disputed the concept that the devices had been seized.
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