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Senior Trump administration official discusses COVID-19 response in Oklahoma

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  • President Donald J. Trump meets with Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards April 29 in the Oval Office of the White House. At left are Dr. Anthony Fauci, Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and Dr. Deborah Birx, United States Global AIDS Coordinator, Response coordinator for White House Coronavirus Task Force Shealah Craighead • Official White House Photo
    President Donald J. Trump meets with Louisiana Gov. John Bel Edwards April 29 in the Oval Office of the White House. At left are Dr. Anthony Fauci, Director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases and Dr. Deborah Birx, United States Global AIDS Coordinator, Response coordinator for White House Coronavirus Task Force Shealah Craighead • Official White House Photo
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Trump administration officials reached out to The Madill Record this week to share details of programs to support Oklahoma during the COVID-19 pandemic.

On April 28, Megan Burris, special assistant to the president and director of White House media, cited the president’s leadership during the health crisis.

“Thanks to President Trump’s leadership, Oklahoma has received significant federal resources to appropriately respond to and slow the spread of COVID-19,” Burris said. “The President will continue to direct this unprecedented level of critical support to help the state effectively protect healthcare workers and first responders and save American lives.”

Then, on April 30, a senior administration official visited with The Madill Record via phone. The offical works closely with the White House Coronavirus Task Force.

The senior administration official said the administration has been working closely with state local leaders since January.

“This week we had our fifteen governor-only conference calls with 18 governors from ag states including Oklahoma with Vice President [Mike] Pence,” the source said.

Governor Kevin Stitt has confirmed these calls during multiple press conferences over the last few weeks.

Stitt’s office has developed a Governor’s Solution Task Force through the pandemic.

The group provides regular updates to both the media and public through Facebook Live and Zoom calls.

Governor Kevin Stitt praised President Trump in a statement.

“The President has been a consistent leader during the COVID-19 crisis, and I am thankful for his continued support as we actively work to respond to this outbreak and keep Oklahomans safe,” Stitt said.

The senior administration source said the executive branch has been coordinating with governments on the local, state and tribal levels.

“It means local and tribal officials can drive [the response] locally and with innovation solutions,” they said.

Among these solutions being touted by the administration is Project Air Bridge.

It is a coordinated public-private partnership designed to expedite the movement of critical supplies from other countries to the United States.

The senior administration official said Project Air Bridge moved PPE supplies to the United States weeks or month sooner than they would normally arrive.

“This supplemented our supply chain management,” they said.

Statistics provided by the White House Communications Office detail deliveries of personal protective equipment (PPE) to Oklahoma during the week of April 18 to April 24, the most recent week the figures were available.

They are as follows:

N-95 Masks 13,600

Surgical Masks 179,500

Eye/Face Shields 4,100

Isolation & Surgical Gowns 66,200

Surgical & Gloves 3,980,800

In addition to the Project Air Bridge efforts, as of April 27, FEMA delivered 132,626 N-95 masks, 315,447 surgical masks, 52,381 medical gowns, 1,902 coveralls, 63,947 face shields, and 279,304 gloves from the Strategic National Stockpile to Oklahoma, the communications office statistics showed.

Working together

The Strategic National Stockpile has been used to reinforce PPE supplies across Oklahoma as detailed in the April 9 issue of The Madill Record.

Some of these additional supplies made their way to Marshall County as Robert Chaney, the county’s emergency manager detailed in the same article.

At that time, Chaney said PPE in the county was running low until last week.

“We were down to three days,” he said. “I’ve been ordering them for three weeks. What we got came from the strategic stockpile.” The recently restarted the

The recently restarted the White House Council on Native American Affair, which will be led by Tyler Fish, who is a native Oklahoman and a citizen of the Muskogee (Creek) Nation.

“Under the leadership of Tyler, we’ve set up a COVID Tribal Group with multiply federal agencies including HHS and FEMA,” the senior administration official said.

“He knows those folks around the country and especially in Oklahoma.”

Other steps

The federal government has taken other steps to address COVID-19 since President Trump declares a National Emergency on March 13.

First was Oklahoma’s Major Disaster Declaration, which was made April 3 after Oklahoma Governor Stitt submitted a major disaster declaration request to the Federal Emergency Management Agency (FEMA). President Trump approved the request on April 5.

Following bipartisan efforts in Congress, the president signed the CARES Act into law on April 24.

The senior administration official added that the US Department of Labor has worked with state unemployment agencies including the Oklahoma Unemployment Security Commission to award more than $10.9 million in emergency administrative unemployment insurance grants to the State of Oklahoma.