Of the many industries that have taken a massive economic hit due to the coronavirus, the hospitality industry is up there; hotels and resorts have likely lost billions considering most people on the planet have been told to stay home. As a result, thousands of hotels remain virtually empty, save for the ones that have chosen to lend a hand during the crisis. In New York City, for example, at least 20 hotels have responded to Governor Andrew Cuomo and Mayor Bill de Blasio’s call to use vacant rooms to house medical workers, to shelter the homeless, and to serve as makeshift hospitals as the existing ones quickly run out of space. (In NYC, an epicenter of the crisis, the government is hoping to triple its existing 20,000 hospital beds by May.) Among those volunteering are the storied Plaza Hotel and St. Regis. Yet while the city is home to Trump International Hotel & Tower, the president’s company has chosen not to open its doors to those most in need because that would require Donald Trump to grow a conscience, a medical breakthrough that might prove even more elusive than a vaccine for COVID-19.

Yes, Politico reports the not-at-all-surprising news that despite Trump’s New York, Chicago, and D.C. hotels remaining open, and despite pleas from public officials, none of them have offered up any rooms. The lack of charity comes as the president has lauded private businesses for helping the federal government respond to the crisis, and as the White House’s Twitter account has praised the hotels actually lending a hand during the pandemic. (“Thank you to hotels around the country for providing healthcare workers and first responders a place to stay while they’re on the front lines of the pandemic,” it wrote earlier this week.) But even a chance to brag about how incredibly generous he is apparently hasn’t been enough to move Trump. “It’s entirely unsurprising,” Representative Jamie Raskin told reporter Anita Kumar. “It never occurred to me the business would engage in philanthropic activity.”

Of course, Trump’s hotels are far from the only ones that have failed to offer up space. But his are the only ones currently owned by the president of the United States, who could take this opportunity to shock the world by doing something altruistic. And yet:

More than 20 [NYC] hotels have volunteered thus far, but more are needed to match the estimated 78,000 infected residents, thousands of whom are likely to need hospital care. The federal government is building temporary hospitals at the Jacob K. Javits Convention Center as well as other locations. The Navy hospital ship Comfort also docked in the city and has been approved to take on coronavirus patients.