The order will end effective July 1.
The emergency order, enacted by the state legislature, gave the commissioner the ability to coordinate the state’s efforts at fighting the virus “to make sure vaccines and other available therapeutics were able to be moved around the state as well as how we looked at responding and procurement and licensing items,” Crum said.
Bryan Fisher, Director of the Division of Homeland Security and Emergency Management, explained, “Past July 1st of this year, any continuing COVID work that was being conducted by local folks under that Public Health Emergency Order will no longer be eligible for FEMA reimbursement.”
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