The two years in edition. Two years and one week ago, the World Health Organization declared a pandemic. Today, in the U.S., there is cause for optimism. We see that daily infections, hospitalizations, and deaths all have fallen precipitously – to levels we have not seen since last summer. There are hints of a return to normalcy in our everyday lives.
Still: three red flags appear on the horizon.
First, the omicron variant is surging in parts of Asia and throughout Europe, where infections on a per capita basis are almost ten times the rate in the U.S. Across the European continent, 95 cases per 100,000 people are being reported. In the U.S. and Canada, that figure is 10 cases per 100,000 people. Experts say a resurgence in cases in the U.S. could be imminent – or it could happen in the summer or fall. The early detection system of wastewater surveillance is raising flags, with more than one-third of sites seeing increases.
Second, despite all we have learned, all we have experienced, the U.S. is woefully unprepared for the next pandemic – or a worsening of the current one. The Biden Administration has – often and aggressively – warned Congress that the federal government is running out of money for vaccines, testing, and treatment. The White House Tuesday warned in a letter to Congress that the country risks being “blindsided” by future coronavirus variants.
Congress failed to include additional COVID-19 relief in its latest appropriations bill; prospects for passage of a stand-alone measure appear uncertain. “We need to have this money,” Jeffrey D. Zients, President Biden’s outgoing coronavirus response coordinator, told the New York Times this week. “This is not nice to have; this is need to have.”
The third red flag? Even as the country struggles to emerge from the pandemic’s long shadow, Americans are suffering from crippling costs. Gas and heating prices are soaring. Rents are skyrocketing. Groceries seem more expensive than ever. Inflation threatens a year of strong recovery, record-breaking economic growth.
But Congress dawdles.
What we need is for Congress to act quickly to pass economic legislation that helps families and workers manage high costs now and advances an economy where everyone can share in the nation’s prosperity.
It shouldn’t be too much to ask.
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