Biden said the deaths of more than 900,000 Americans from COVID-19
emphasized the need to respond to the pandemic with "the full
capacity" of the federal government.
Former President Donald Trump had declared a national emergency
almost two years ago to free up $50 billion in federal aid.
"There remains a need to continue this national emergency," Biden
said in a letter on Friday to the speaker of the House of
Representatives and the president of the Senate.
The letter was released by the White House.
The emergency would have been automatically terminated unless,
within 90 days prior to the anniversary date of its declaration, the
president sent a notice to the Congress stating it is to continue
beyond the anniversary date.
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Biden's step to extend the
emergency comes even as a slew of local leaders
in the United States are dialing back pandemic
restrictions as the Omicron wave ebbs.
The governors of New York and Massachusetts
announced last week that they would end certain
mask mandates in their states, following similar
moves by New Jersey, California, Connecticut,
Delaware and Oregon.
U.S. health officials said earlier this week
they were preparing for the next phase of the
pandemic as Omicron-related cases decline.
(Reporting by Kanishka Singh in Bengaluru;
Editing by Will Dunham and Sandra Maler)
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