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More than $10M worth of masks, protective gear left in the rain outside Bay Area event center

  

Category:  News & Politics

Via:  jeremy-in-nc  •  2 years ago  •  6 comments

By:   By Dan Noyes

More than $10M worth of masks, protective gear left in the rain outside Bay Area event center
San Mateo County workers are scrambling to clean up a mess uncovered by the ABC7 I-Team. More than $10 million worth of precious personal protective equipment-- purchased with your tax dollars - was left outside in the rain.

Wow.  Just wow.


S E E D E D   C O N T E N T



San Mateo County workers are scrambling to clean up a mess  uncovered by the ABC7 I-Team . More than $10 million worth of precious personal protective equipment-- purchased with your tax dollars - was left outside in the rain.

We all know how important masks, hospital gowns, and other protective gear are, as the  COVID pandemic surges yet again .

This seems hard to believe, but top county officials didn't know that thousands of boxes of PPE were moved outside and forgotten for months until the I-Team told them.

Dan Noyes got a tip on a recent rainy day and went straight to the San Mateo County Event Center, Gate 9, and couldn't quite believe what he found. Thousands upon thousands of boxes containing all sorts of brand new personal protective equipment soaking in the rain; stacks of boxes collapsing, too many to count, some breaking open and spilling their contents.

Noyes says he found "hospital gowns in all different sizes. Here's size M, there's large, and of course, here's double XL."

He also spotted pallets of face shields, vented goggles and various types of coveralls: "Boxes upon boxes of PPE just rotting in the rain. How did this happen?"

Our road to some answers and accountability started with a security guard. Remember, the county owns this property.

SECURITY GUARD : "Can I help you?"

DAN NOYES : "I'm fine. I work at Channel 7, I'm Dan Noyes."

SECURITY GUARD : "Okay."

DAN NOYES : "I'm just taking some pictures."

SECURITY GUARD : "Did somebody invite you to come on the property?"

DAN NOYES : "I don't need an invitation."

SECURITY GUARD : "Pardon me?"

DAN NOYES : "I'm a taxpayer, I don't need an invitation."

SECURITY GUARD : "If we don't have an event then you are not supposed to be on the property."

DAN NOYES : "I understand. I'll be done in a few minutes."

SECURITY GUARD : "Okay, I will let my boss know."

DAN NOYES : "That's fine."

His boss? Dana Stoehr, CEO of the nonprofit that runs the event center for the county.

DAN NOYES : "Why is all the stuff going to waste here?"

DANA STOEHR : "So, can you stop filming?"

DAN NOYES : "No, I work at Channel Seven, I need to ask questions."

DANA STOEHR : "I understand, but it's not going to waste. It's damaged. It was damaged."

DAN NOYES : "It was damaged or it's being damaged now?"

DANA STOEHR : "No, it was damaged in a previous storm."

Stoehr would not provide more details. We later learned the event center moved all that PPE outside in September because it needed the space, and those big storms last October first damaged the PPE.

DANA STOEHR : "It's not my property. I can't discuss it with you."

DAN NOYES : "But as the CEO of the event center, isn't it your job to protect the stuff that's been stored here?"

DANA STOEHR : "It's, it was fully taken care of exactly the way it should have been."

San Mateo County Supervisor David Canepa disagrees, and tells the I-Team, "It's because of your investigation, because of your investigation, that we have to acknowledge that we made a mistake. And the public needs to know that a mistake was made."

How costly was that mistake? Noyes sifted through the boxes for some answers.

Take a look at this box from DWL Studios - 100 non-sterilized protective gowns. A salesman told us they go for as much as $7.50 each. Add it up, and this pallet alone is worth $18,000.

These goggles with vents run $3.99 apiece, $478 worth in this box among many laying in the rain.

The load also includes 900 of these mop bucket ringers that sell for $70 each - a total of $63,000. I also found boxes and boxes of mop handles that run for $25 each.

Mike Callagy is San Mateo County Manager.

DAN NOYES : "Can you give me an idea of the amount of money we're talking?"

MIKE CALLAGY : "I don't know. There's a lot of PPE out there."

DAN NOYES : "Is it safe to say over a million?"

MIKE CALLAGY : "I would say, oh yeah, I would say over, over a million."

DAN NOYES : "Is it multiple millions or-"

MIKE CALLAGY : "I don't know. But it's, it's, it's, there's a lot of PPE out there."

Callagy told us he didn't know about all that PPE that's been deteriorating outside for months until I called. He immediately ordered county workers to bring the supplies back inside, to run an inventory and see how much of it is salvageable. As they worked, SKY7 gave the clearest view yet of how many pallets of PPE crumbled from the rains since last fall.

DAN NOYES : "But I really am trying to find out who was responsible. Was this a mistake by the event center or was it a mistake by your team?"

MIKE CALLAGY : "It clearly is a mistake by the county and ultimately, I'm responsible for the county. So, you know, I take full responsibility for it. ... We are taking precautions to make sure that doesn't happen again."

A source tells the I-Team a convoy of garbage trucks filled up with brand new PPE and took it to the dump, in the past two months -- a massive waste of your tax dollars that the county promises won't happen again.


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Jeremy Retired in NC
Professor Expert
1  seeder  Jeremy Retired in NC    2 years ago

On today's episode of "How fucked up is fucked up" we have California.

 
 
 
Sparty On
Professor Principal
2  Sparty On    2 years ago

Longshoreman probably wanted double time to move em inside.

 
 
 
Freefaller
Professor Quiet
3  Freefaller    2 years ago

Lol ooops

 
 
 
Tacos!
Professor Guide
4  Tacos!    2 years ago

What a mess. What a waste.

One hopeful thing I saw is that even though the boxes are ruined, it looks like much of the material inside was wrapped in its own plastic. Other stuff like plastic masks and mop handles aren’t damaged by water. So a lot of that stuff may still be useful.

 
 
 
zuksam
Junior Silent
4.1  zuksam  replied to  Tacos! @4    2 years ago

Everything would need to be broken down, dried, and repacked to prevent mold. Mop handles and Wringers can be salvaged even if there's rust on metal parts (they'll end up at a swap meet not at a hospital) but masks and similar items even if they're wrapped in plastic will be junk if the box they're in smells even a little musty. It's a question of how much do we spend to salvage this stuff before we're just throwing good money after bad, the hourly cost of paying city workers to do it is well over 30 bucks an hour and as government employees they don't work that hard. I say do a quick sort and sell what we can,(mop handles and such), donate what we can to a poor country that will sort and use it, and trash the rest. Most importantly Fire that guy who was in charge of the facility and sue the company he worked for.

 
 
 
Tacos!
Professor Guide
4.1.1  Tacos!  replied to  zuksam @4.1    2 years ago
Most importantly Fire that guy who was in charge of the facility and sue the company he worked for.

I know, right? What could possibly have been the thought process that led to a decision to move that much material outside into the elements?

 
 

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