As public health experts have said ad nauseam at this point, one of the most crucial measures that needs to be in place in order to “reopen” the country and get people back to normal life is an expansive testing regimen. While Donald Trump boldly and insanely claimed last week that the United States has performed more coronavirus tests than every other country in the world combined, in real life, well over 20 million tests have been performed worldwide, while the U.S. has done roughly 20 to 25% of that. But on Monday, the White House revealed some exciting news!

According to a new set of documents, the federal government is preparing to send all 50 states enough kits to screen at least 2% of residents for the deadly, highly contagious disease. Don’t adjust your dials, you read that right: 2% as in t-w-o, as in 98% of people should try Germany or South Korea if they want to get tested. The lack of available tests kits—unless one is a professional basketball player, singer, or actor—has been the number one complaint from business leaders, according to the Wall Street Journal. (In March, Trump insisted that “anybody” who wanted to get a test could, which was of course a massive lie.)

So what about states that think it would be prudent to test, like, more than a few people for COVID-19? The administration has a message for them, and it’s to go bark up another tree:

In the blueprint, responsibility for setting up testing plans is shifted to states and the private sector. “Testing plans and rapid response programs will be federally supported, state managed, and locally executed,” reads the blueprint document, which was obtained by CNN. In an overview of the plan, the federal government’s role is described as providing “strategic direction and technical assistance regarding the best use of available testing technologies” and “expedited regulatory authorizations” for tests. But the document says the federal government should act only as the “supplier of last resort” for testing materials.