All local governments must declare a health emergency in order to tap into state and federal emergency funds, according to Sierra County Emergency Services Manager Paul Tooley and Sierra County Manager Bruce Swingle.
New Mexico and the U.S. have declared health emergencies.
Local entities must spend their own money first and then ask for emergency-fund reimbursements, Swingle said.
The health emergency resolution also allows governmental entities to “exceed the usual expense parameters” under State rules, Swingle said. “We can spend what’s needed quickly.”
The County has not yet opened “an emergency operations center,” Swingle said, but if it needs a command post in the future, it will probably be at the County Administration Building at 855 VanPatten St., where there is a meeting room, phones, and other necessities. “There could be other operation centers set up as well.”
Swingle said all the local governmental entities, including Sierra Vista Hospital, “are meeting often” to discuss preparations and the current status of coronavirus infection.
The biggest concern is “food security,” Swingle said. The county has gotten “some calls of some people concerned about food,” but no calls in which they have no food.
The County has already ordered “the staples,” Swingle said, which will soon be delivered, such as soups, noodles, macaroni and cheese, and other nonperishables that “we can package,” and give to those in need.
Although water security has been raised, Swingle said, “I see no need for concern.”
Making sure there is enough equipment for first responders, such as healthcare workers, is the second priority, Swingle said.
Those two topics, food security and first-responders’ needs, among other needs, are being planned for among the governmental entities, Swingle said.
“Testing has been going very well in New Mexico,” Swingle noted, with no shortage of test kits and with labs other than the state labs brought on board to process them in a timely manner.