Sec. 3. Reports to the Congress
362 words·~2 min read·
/bill/116/s/3858/is/section-3·A research copy — for the controlling text, always check the official state or federal source. Not legal advice.
Not less than 14 days after the date a covered emergency is in effect, and not less than every 14 days thereafter until the date that is 30 days after the date on which the covered emergency is terminated, the Administrator shall submit to the Congress a report on the activities carried out under this Act. The report required under paragraph
(1)shall include— information on the number of impacted individuals, disaggregated by State, condition, and severity of such condition— on the date the report is submitted to the Congress; as projected at 14 days from the date the report is submitted to the Congress; and as projected at 60 days from the date the report is submitted to the Congress; the amount of medical equipment still needed to diagnose and treat the condition for which the covered emergency is in effect, disaggregated by State; requests submitted by the States or by persons under section 2; information on the contracts created and executed under section 2; the amount of medical equipment resold or distributed by the Federal Government, including the allocation and projected allocation of government and existing health system medical equipment, disaggregated by State— on the date the report is submitted to the Congress; as projected at 14 days from the date the report is submitted to the Congress; and as projected at 60 days from the date the report is submitted to the Congress; and other Federal contracts for medical equipment entered into outside of section 2. Not later than 60 days after the termination of the covered emergency, the Administrator shall submit to the Congress a report on the activities carried out under this Act. The report required under paragraph
(1)shall include— the content from the biweekly reports submitted to the Congress under subsection (a); the current status of the Strategic National Stockpile, including the inventory of medical equipment and the projected quantity of medical equipment required to mitigate a future public health emergency or other covered emergency; and an assessment of actions that Federal, State, and local governments should take to build resiliency to prevent, detect, treat, and mitigate a public health emergency or other covered emergency.