There’ll be a website, at some point, that will work in some way, maybe
Coronavirus pandemic latest: Trump declares ‘two very big words’ – national emergency – and unexpectedly ropes in Google to help in some form
In a Friday press conference, US President Donald Trump declared a national state of emergency to mitigate the spread of the COVID-19 coronavirus… with the help of Google, which was news to Google.
The President thanked Google for apparently rushing to develop some unnamed website to help find and coordinate COVID-19 testing for people in the US. Such a thing is needed because America is behind the curve in rolling out novel coronavirus testing to its population – perhaps for political reasons – and delays to testing means delays to containing the bio-nasty and treating the sick.
“Google has 1,700 engineers working on this right now,” he added.
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The Register asked Google whether this is accurate. We’ve not heard back. Perhaps because the President’s public reassurance of a soon-to-launch Google-built website was not anticipated by Google.
According to CNBC, Google CEO Sundar Pichai told employees in an email on Thursday that Google and Verily – a health company run by Google-parent Alphabet – are working on improving a website called Project Baseline so that it can direct high-risk folks to coronavirus testing sites. It’s not clear if this is the website Trump was referring to.
What Verily described does not marry up with what the government promised: the website’s functionality to direct folks to COVID-19 tests isn’t close to being finished, engineering time is voluntary rather than large scale, and it will target the San Francisco Bay Area first and then maybe a wider area at some point. Whatever form the Google-Verily project takes, there’s no word on how patient data will be treated and the degree of privacy that will be offered.
For what it’s worth, Dr Deborah Birks, White House coronavirus response coordinator, presented a chart indicating that the alleged website will allow people to log-in through some undisclosed mechanism and check their symptoms. Those deemed to be symptomatic will be directed to drive-thru testing clinics. The biological samples will be sent to labs to be tested for COVID-19 and the results will be posted to Google’s website.
Trump urged states to set up emergency operations centers immediately and asked hospitals to activate their emergency operation centers.
Trump also said student loan interest would be suspended until further notice and that he had directed the Secretary of Energy to purchase oil while the price was low, to fill up the nation’s strategic oil reserve.
On Thursday, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-KY) sent the opposite message when he rejected House Democrats’ emergency response proposal for COVID-19 and told Democratic lawmakers to pass “smaller, non-controversial” spending measures.
Asked about this during the Q&A, Trump said, “We don’t think they’re giving enough. They’re not doing what’s right for the country.”
Yet after the press briefing concluded, House Speaker Nancy Pelosi (D-CA) said an agreement has been reached to pass the Families First Coronavirus Response Act, which provides paid emergency leave, with two weeks of paid sick leave, and up to three months of paid family and medical leave.
NPR White House correspondent Yamiche Alcindor also asked the President whether he accepted responsibility for disbanding the CDC pandemic office in 2018 – a team that would have, right now, proved rather useful.
And when asked by another reporter if he would take responsibility for the delay in COVID-19 testing in America, the President shot back: “No, I don’t take responsibility at all. Because we were given a set of circumstances, and we were given rules, regulations and specifications from a different time. It wasn’t meant for this kind of event with the kind of numbers that we’re talking about.” ®