You and I are going to have to agree to disagree. That would be like every state negotiating their own tariffs internationally. Sorry but United States MEANS coordination at a national level. They should have set up a means to determine need and then sent what wasn't available to nowhere. Come ON there was no prep for this, nothing at a national level. Our Federal government has been a joke through all this and is become more so. The CDC sent out initial test kits that the states had to go behind their back to determine that they didn't work. The CDC had gotten it's pandemic response group removed a year ago. Steve, you are about to have the worst of the worst in your location. I surely hope you come out ok, but wouldn't it have been nice to have _some_ national preparedness?

On 04/14/2020 10:29 AM, Steve Jones wrote:
you saw what happened with the "united states" on ventilators, every state demanded the feds give them every ventilator whether they need them or not. The feds need to stay completely out of the testing game. its literally the governor of each states responsibility to make sure he has people in place to make sure systems operate and communicate up the chain


On Tue, Apr 14, 2020 at 12:09 PM Robert <i...@avantwireless.com <mailto:i...@avantwireless.com>> wrote:

    At the risk of breaking Lent..   I wish we were the United States
    instead of the Competing States and Utah could use some of it's
excess capacity to help out elsewhere while they don't need it... Seems a waste to not use that capacity while it's there. Maybe
    relax the restrictions and chase down contacts and test to see what
    the asymptomatic case profile looks like...

    On 4/14/20 8:32 AM, Robert wrote:
    That's some very interesting numbers...   And way interesting is
    the ability to perform such good testing...

    On 4/14/20 8:29 AM, ch...@wbmfg.com <mailto:ch...@wbmfg.com> wrote:
    From Utah:
    SALT LAKE CITY — Utah health officials said Monday they’re seeing
    a low demand for testing for the new coronavirus and they don’t
    know why.
    “That’s the million-dollar question. We’re really trying to
    figure out,” said Dr. Angela Dunn, epidemiologist with the Utah
    Department of Health.
    Utah reported 60 new confirmed cases of COVID-19 on Monday — a
    smaller rise compared to the previous several days. The new cases
    bring the state’s tally up to 2,363 confirmed cases out of 45,787
    people tested.
    An additional 1,500 people have been tested since Sunday,
    according to the Utah Department of Health. The state is capable
    of administering up to 5,000 tests per day.




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