Key Trump task force must work remotely after positive COVID-19 test
A critical White House unit that is getting, shipping and distributing goods to fight the spread of the corona-virus has been ordered to vacate its war room and begin working remotely after a "partner" of the group tested positive for COVID-19, according to an email that Federal Emergency Management Agency officials sent to staff members late Monday night.
"Until further notice, all personnel in the Supply Chain Resilience task force" on a particular floor of one of FEMA's buildings "and the FEMA Conference Center are required to teleworking," according to an email obtained by NBC News and confirmed by a FEMA official. The message was sent to FEMA headquarters staff at 11:17 p.m. ET Monday.
The "Conference Center" is a war room set up in the FEMA complex in Washington where Admiral John Polowczyk's supply chain unit, a sub-task force within Vice President Mike Pence's larger task force that has gotten particular attention from presidential son-in-law Jared Kushner, works to find and allocate personal protective equipment and other materials needed to combat the spread of corona-virus.
It was not immediately clear what effect the new teleworking situation would have on the work of the task force, which has been highly visible thanks to Polowczyk's appearances at daily White House briefings.
It has also been highly controversial. One reason for that is the involvement of Kushner, who is simultaneously deeply engaged in President Donald Trump's re-election campaign. The task force has also drawn criticism for circumventing existing federal procedures and structures in ways that critics say have created delays, inefficiencies and cost increases in acquiring goods for the corona-virus fight.
Before Monday night's email, the task force members were working together in the conference center war room rather than from separate locations.
A FEMA spokesperson told NBC News that after conducting "contact tracing" in recent days, FEMA concluded that "at no time" did the person who tested positive "or any other known to have contact with them, come within six feet of any other Task Force principal for a prolonged period of time."
In addition, the spokesperson said, "all areas visited by Task Force members were disinfected prior to their visits" and that "FEMA will facilitate cleaning to ensure that the potentially affected work-space meets federal health and safety standards."
The closure of two locations within the FEMA complex indicates that the "partner" who tested positive — partner is a term used for someone who normally doesn't work for the agency — was in both places, according to the FEMA official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of a lack of authority to speak publicly.
The supply chain group is "not the first task force" to get a stay-at-home order, this person said, adding that "we've had numerous people test positive ... sometimes they're telling us, sometimes they're not."
Reference: Yahoo News
"Until further notice, all personnel in the Supply Chain Resilience task force" on a particular floor of one of FEMA's buildings "and the FEMA Conference Center are required to teleworking," according to an email obtained by NBC News and confirmed by a FEMA official. The message was sent to FEMA headquarters staff at 11:17 p.m. ET Monday.
The "Conference Center" is a war room set up in the FEMA complex in Washington where Admiral John Polowczyk's supply chain unit, a sub-task force within Vice President Mike Pence's larger task force that has gotten particular attention from presidential son-in-law Jared Kushner, works to find and allocate personal protective equipment and other materials needed to combat the spread of corona-virus.
It was not immediately clear what effect the new teleworking situation would have on the work of the task force, which has been highly visible thanks to Polowczyk's appearances at daily White House briefings.
It has also been highly controversial. One reason for that is the involvement of Kushner, who is simultaneously deeply engaged in President Donald Trump's re-election campaign. The task force has also drawn criticism for circumventing existing federal procedures and structures in ways that critics say have created delays, inefficiencies and cost increases in acquiring goods for the corona-virus fight.
Before Monday night's email, the task force members were working together in the conference center war room rather than from separate locations.
A FEMA spokesperson told NBC News that after conducting "contact tracing" in recent days, FEMA concluded that "at no time" did the person who tested positive "or any other known to have contact with them, come within six feet of any other Task Force principal for a prolonged period of time."
In addition, the spokesperson said, "all areas visited by Task Force members were disinfected prior to their visits" and that "FEMA will facilitate cleaning to ensure that the potentially affected work-space meets federal health and safety standards."
The closure of two locations within the FEMA complex indicates that the "partner" who tested positive — partner is a term used for someone who normally doesn't work for the agency — was in both places, according to the FEMA official, who spoke on the condition of anonymity because of a lack of authority to speak publicly.
The supply chain group is "not the first task force" to get a stay-at-home order, this person said, adding that "we've had numerous people test positive ... sometimes they're telling us, sometimes they're not."
Reference: Yahoo News
Key Trump task force must work remotely after positive COVID-19 test
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