A coronavirus outbreak has spread through a federal law enforcement training facility in South Carolina promoting the national employees union to call for a halt to training.
At least 23 students and faculty have tested positive at Federal Law Enforcement Training Center in Charleston, where Customs and Border Protection personnel were training, according to the National Treasury Employees Union.
On Friday, the union, which represents thousands of CBP employees, officially requested that the agency immediately send home any employees currently in training, as well as test employees for Covid-19 prior to the departure.
“The FLETC Charleston facility is no longer safe for trainees under the current circumstances,” said union National President Tony Reardon in a statement to CNN, adding that the union learned of the “alarming outbreak” earlier this week.
Shutting down training would allow for an evaluation and to avoid recurrence, said Reardon.
The outbreak comes amid increased concern about exposure for federal frontline employees and a spike in coronavirus cases in the southern United States. As of Thursday, 1,426 CBP employees have tested positive for Covid-19 and eight have died as a result of the virus, according to the agency.
The Charleston facility is one of three federal law enforcement residential training sites and is used for CBP, US Coast Guard, Immigration and Customs Enforcement and other federal law enforcement agencies.