News

Sens. Baldwin, Murphy rally support for invoking Defense Production Act to maximize medical equipment, supply output

In a letter to President Joe Biden this week, U.S. Sens. Tammy Baldwin (D-WI) and Chris Murphy (D-CT) led 24 other senators in supporting full use of the Defense Production Act (DPA) to ramp up the production and stockpiling of medical, testing and protective equipment for use in the COVID-19 pandemic.

Supply chain issues have been a continuous issue in efforts to combat the virus and contain its spread. The previous administration tapped the DPA to counteract this, but only on a limited basis, against the wishes of Senate Democrats. The Biden administration signaled its intent to use the act even before Biden was in the White House, however, buoying Democrats’ hopes that manufacturers could be given greater access to affordable, domestically sourced raw materials even as they are asked to create more.

“Given the continued supply chain issues that we have seen over the past year, we believe it is in the best interest of the American public to shore up our access to critical supplies immediately and in the long term through all available DPA authorities,” the senators wrote. “The DPA can help us reach our goal of vaccinating enough of the American public to achieve herd immunity by ramping up production of sterile needles, rubber stoppers, syringes, and other vaccine supplies now. Given the current lack of a national vaccine plan, we need to use every tool available to make up the ground we have lost.”

The senators also noted that the DPA could further regulate vaccine distribution by ensuring companies do not charge for the vaccine in the future. Further, it could allow for enhanced production of materials needed for vaccines in future pandemics, build domestic supplies and capabilities of raw materials and PPE — the reliance on foreign supply chains for the latter was particularly felt early in the pandemic — and buoy American manufacturers by incentivizing products made in America.

“Your use of executive action to utilize the extraordinary authorities under DPA will support a more functional response to the COVID-19 pandemic and ensure that America is stronger now and more resilient when the next pandemic occurs,” the senators wrote.

Chris Galford

Recent Posts

Reward offered for Iranian nationals charged over multi-year cyber campaign against U.S. companies

In unsealing a 13-page indictment this week, the U.S. Department of Justice (DOJ) revealed charges…

8 hours ago

FEND OFF Fentanyl Act included in national security supplemental

A bill targeting the illicit fentanyl supply chain, the Fentanyl Eradication and Narcotics Deterrence (FEND)…

8 hours ago

Pennsylvania earns $10M federal grant to improve crime statistics reporting

In order to move the state closer to federal standards and allow reporting of local…

1 day ago

DoD innovative technologies pilot funds 13 additional projects

For the next round of participants in a pilot program to Accelerate the Procurement and…

1 day ago

House advances aid for Ukraine, Israel and defense manufacturing after weeks of doubt

The U.S. House of Representatives advanced a $95 billion package (H.R.815) over the weekend that…

2 days ago

Ammunition Supply Chain Act proposes mandated reporting on materials key to U.S. ammunition manufacturing

Under a new bill – the Ammunition Supply Chain Act – proposed in the House…

2 days ago

This website uses cookies.