Our Time has Come (Donate Your Masks)

Our country gradually but steadily has moved to war footing to battle an unseen enemy, a virus. Around the world countries have begun to close borders, shutter businesses, demand citizens stay indoors when not working, not cluster in groups and so on. Our government, slow on the uptake but increasingly less so, has invoked a 1950s law that empowers President Trump to force industry where possible to vastly increase production of wartime supplies needed by the medical community, including masks, gowns, and respirators very much like President Franklin Roosevelt did as we moved into war against Nazi Germany.

Back then though, private citizens did their bit. They bought war bonds to help finance the struggle. They recycled materials in short supply like paper. Neighborhoods held scrap drives collecting copper and brass, often in the form of pots and pans, for use making artillery shells. Families saved fat drippings from cooking to make soap at government request. There were numerous other sacrifices including the draft, curfews, deferment of wage increases, and acceptance of higher taxes.

Now our time has come. We must stop hoarding goods and make sure we buy only what we need so that our neighbors have what they need. We should collect and turn over to hospitals items doctors and nurses desperately need like N95 masks, expected to be in short supply within weeks. Latex gloves fall into this category as well, as does hand sanitizer. We need to protect our troops or we will lose this war. Instead of individuals and companies showing up at local hospitals perhaps cities can organize the collection of these items. Until such time though we have to do the task ourselves. Collecting fat drippings may be necessary again to increase the soap supply. Submitting to shelter-in-place despite our peripatetic culture will become our version of the curfew.

For those of us in higher income brackets we have a responsibility to our nation. The President will likely sign a $1 trillion stimulus package to help the millions of workers who have quickly tumbled into unemployment as businesses have closed. Given the already swollen deficit we will have no choice but to buy bonds and submit to higher taxes to finance the program, or those programs surely to come.  Underwriting some form of national health care for those who catch the disease will be our only way to cover the cost of care and ensure public health given the breadth and length of the coming war.

I’ve only begun to think about this but am taking the first steps forward. Emerald Packaging has donated our small corporate stash of N95 masks to a local hospital. We’ve switched to an isopropyl alcohol solution as a sanitizer which we have plenty of thanks to our use of it to tone inks. We’ve increased our costs by hiring dedicated employees to disinfect surfaces in order to keep workers safe. We’re covering Covid-19 tests and urgent care visits related to the disease, likely another hit to profits. We’ve emphasized to employees that we must wash and sanitize our hands and workstations to make sure we stay open given that we are part of a wartime production system, providing the packaging required to ensure food safety. And at home we definitely opted not to hoard and we’re constantly washing our hands to prevent spreading the disease.

Within the company we’re also thinking about how we can help wartime production. Sure we’re pulling out the stops to provide the packaging needed to protect the food supply. But we’re also brainstorming how to convert equipment to produce plastic gloves and single use sheets to cover tabletops, where the virus can live for up to 72 hours. We won’t be huge producers, but we can do our part.

What’s missing is coordination from the top. So far the country isn’t of one mind when it comes to shelter-in-place, business closures, and so on. President Trump needs to get us all on the same page. Government — local or national — hasn’t emphasized enough that we shouldn’t hoard nor has it called for those of us who have items in short supply like masks to turn them over. We have little time to role out a war effort. The enemy is at our gates. If our leaders need inspiration they need only look to Roosevelt or Churchill.

I know we can do this. We can survive higher taxes and curfews and rationing. We can forgo goods needed for the war effort. We can work longer hours when needed and defer the increased earnings or part of our salaries to finance the struggle. Every generation faces its challenges, but few face a social apocalypse equal to the one we turn towards. Hardship, weariness and suffering await us. But with those comes victory. So donate those masks….now.

 

 

2 thoughts on “Our Time has Come (Donate Your Masks)

  1. Mark Leyva says:

    Fabulous Mr. Kelly!

  2. Doug Hix says:

    Right on!

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Follow

Get every new post delivered to your Inbox

Join other followers: