A performance audit released this week confirmed what Pennsylvania business owners already suspected; the process used to determine businesses closures during COVID-19 mitigation efforts was flawed and administered unevenly.
Pennsylvania’s Auditor General Timothy DeFoor’s audit provides a window into the thought process of Governor Tom Wolf’s administration as it shuttered thousands of businesses.
“This audit revealed a flawed process that provided inconsistent answers to business owners and caused confusion,” DeFoor said in a statement. “While the pandemic certainly presented some unique challenges, the process was hastily assembled on the fly, unevenly administered and should be reformed before anything like it is ever used again.”
On March 19, 2020, Wolf released a list of businesses considered “life-sustaining,” and ordered all other businesses closed to help slow the spread of COVID-19.
Gas stations, grocery stores, beer distributors, and abortion clinics were considered life-sustaining and could stay open. Real estate brokers, auto sales, hair salons, elective surgeries, and child care services were not considered life-sustaining and forced to shut down.
Businesses could ask to remain open by applying for a waiver from the Department of Community and Economic Development (DCED).
In the 15 days it accepted waiver applications, March 20 through April 3, 2020, DCED received 42,380 applications.
During that time, DCED posted online five different versions of the waiver request form for businesses to use, the audit said.
Of the applications submitted, one-third, 14,168, were from businesses that did not even require a waiver to remain open because they provided goods or services already declared life-sustaining. The fact that they applied for a waiver illustrates the frustration and confusion businesses experienced, the audit said.
Pennsylvania More Restrictive
To determine which businesses to close, the federal government gave the state guidance that considered essential workers as those critical for protecting public health and safety, and also considered those supporting economic and national security as essential. The guidance amounted to 14 sectors with essential critical infrastructure workers in each sector.
The Wolf administration built a more complex system to consider a business’s life-sustaining or non-life-sustaining qualities. It listed 10 industries, 19 sectors, 105 subsectors, and 306 industry groups, with exceptions for certain types of businesses.
The Wolf administration’s plan restricted more businesses from remaining open than the federal guidelines, the audit said.
Once waiver applications started to arrive, DCED asked employees who were working from home and given no formal training to work as reviewers and decide if a business should get a waiver or remain closed.
For example, massage businesses were closed, but some got waivers because they provided massages for essential health care workers. Pet groomers were closed but those that sold pet food could keep the food part of their business open.
Auto sales were not allowed but an auto dealer could keep the repair shop open.
Pennsylvania residents were going out of state to buy cars, the audit said. A Pennsylvania nurse whose car was wrecked in a crash had to go to Ohio to get a new vehicle.
“The restriction on automobile sales not only adversely affected Pennsylvania automobile dealerships, but it resulted in Pennsylvania residents being forced to travel out of state to purchase a vehicle necessary to travel to their critical jobs during a time when residents were being asked to limit travel in order to limit the spread of the virus,” the audit said.
“The shutdown came as a surprise to everyone,” Daniel Durden, chief executive officer of the Pennsylvania Builders Association, told The Epoch Times in a phone interview. “There was so little time to button up job sites, to protect buildings from being damaged or being a danger to people in the neighborhood who may wander into a construction site.”
The waiver process looked like an opportunity to work within the shutdown, Durden said, but home builders found inconsistency when they applied for waivers.
“We had members share waiver applications that worked. Others used identical language; sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn’t,” Durden said.
Often a builder would be rejected for the waiver but the contractor who was going to do the work would be approved. The main contractor could not open the worksite, leaving them both out of work.
“If you can’t line up your subcontractors in the order the work needs to be done, not only will it take longer to build the home, it will cost you a lot more money,” Durden said that happened during the shutdown. “Builders operating without a lot of reserves when the shutdown occurred went out of business.”
More Waiver Issues
The audit was based on a sampling of 150 waiver applications. In the sample, four businesses were allowed to remain open that should have been closed; two were told to close that did not need a waiver to remain open; two were told they did not need a waiver but were later incorrectly told to close; and three received no decision but were sent an unrelated letter.
“The results of these decision errors by reviewers had real life negative consequences to businesses that should have been able to operate but instead were notified that they had to close,” the audit says.
Other issues with the waiver application and review processes identified by the performance audit included:
- Waiver applications processed early in the program were reviewed differently than those processed later, with some later applications receiving multiple levels of review including by legal counsel.
- Businesses that included key words (such as healthcare workers) on their applications often resulted in favorable, but questionable, responses. Additionally, some business owners argued that their businesses were personally life-sustaining rather than explain how their businesses provided life-sustaining products or services to customers.
- Waiver application databases did not keep the identity of all individuals that reviewed an application, along with all decisions made, only retaining the last decision made.
- Waiver application databases were not designed to require reviewers to write the reason for decisions made.
- The wording of the waiver decision responses emailed to businesses by DCED lacked clarity and could have led to confusion for businesses as to what, if any, business operations they could continue to perform.
DCED Responds
The audit was given to DCED before it was made public and DCED Secretary Dennis Davin wrote a letter that is attached to the end of the audit.
The waiver requests DCED received ranged from “heartfelt and often heart wrenching individuals pleas from small business owners to keep their struggling businesses open, to requests from multinational corporate entities represented by legal counsel,” Davin wrote. “This diversity presented a unique set of challenges for making consistent determinations as to which businesses could remain open because they were life-sustaining and which businesses, unfortunately, had to remain closed to protect public health.”
“The DCED appreciates the feedback provided by the Auditor General on the business exemption process undertaken at the height of the COVID-19 pandemic,” DCED Communications Director Casey Smith told The Epoch Times in an email.
“The Wolf Administration prides itself on transparency, and this audit reinforces what we have said time and time again-this situation was unprecedented and DCED is proud of the work accomplished by our team in an incredibly short time period,” Smith said. “The public can be assured that every decision was made in a professional manner. We thank the auditor general’s team for their review and feedback of the business exemption process and for reassuring the public that all decisions were made in a fair, professional, and transparent manner.”
Source: The Epochtimes