Passengers are disembarked Sunday from the hantavirus-stricken cruise ship MV Hondius...

Passengers are disembarked Sunday from the hantavirus-stricken cruise ship MV Hondius at the port of Granadilla in Tenerife, Canary Islands, Spain. Credit: AP/Manu Fernandez

WASHINGTON — U.S. Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer on Sunday said the nation’s response to the deadly hantavirus outbreak that emerged aboard a cruise ship in the Canary Islands is undermined because of previous health-worker firings by the Trump Administration.

In a statement, the New York Democrat demanded the immediate rehiring of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention cruise ship inspectors and port health station staff that he says are "needed to track Americans exposed to hantavirus."

"The very CDC inspectors and port health workers we need to track this virus, the people whose entire job is to keep deadly diseases off cruise ships and out of our country, Donald Trump fired them," Schumer said in a statement.

The senator repeated his demand for restoration of the jobs in letters to Secretary of State Marco Rubio and Health Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. He also called for the United States to immediately rejoin the World Health Organization, with an aim of better coordination of responses if any outbreak develops beyond the ship.

Schumer’s remarks Sunday came as the first passengers to contract the hantavirus had been evacuated from the Dutch-flagged MV Hondius in Tenerife, Canary Islands, and others on the cruise ship were disembarking.

There was no immediate response Sunday from the White House or the Department of Health and Human Services to Schumer's remarks.

The CDC said Friday it had deployed a team of epidemiologists and medical professionals to the Canary Islands, where the M/V Hondius was then still headed. That team was to conduct an exposure risk assessment for each American passenger and provide recommendations for the level of monitoring required.

From there, passengers from Turkey, France, ⁠the United Kingdom and the U.S. were expected to be evacuated to their home countries, followed by six people from "Australia, New Zealand and Asia. The 17 American passengers were set to relay on a special chartered flight to Nebraska, home to the national quarantine unit and the Nebraska biocontainment unit, according to the CDC.

Since the vessel departed Argentina last month, at least three deaths as of Sunday had been linked to hantavirus, typically caused by exposure to rodents.

In a statement Friday, the CDC said: "At this time, the risk to the American public remains extremely low."

WHO also has sought to underscore that hantavirus is different from the COVID-19 virus and poses a lower risk to the public.

Published reports last month said Kennedy had laid off full-time employees in the CDC’s Vessel Sanitation Program as part of a budget-cutting move, leaving as few as 12 U.S. public health inspectors to oversee all current and future inspections.

In his letters Sunday, Schumer give Kennedy and Rubio until May 17 to provide the precise number of full-time CDC staff working on the hantavirus response, current staffing tied the Port and Vessel Sanitation programs, and details of the Trump Administration’s communication with WHO officials.

He is also seeking the plans to coordinate with local governments around arrivals and health screenings of Americans returning from a ship.


 

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Newsday Live and Long Island LitFest present an evening with "Beverly Hills 90210" actress, podcaster and author Jennie Garth. Newsday’s Elisa DiStefano hosts an in-depth discussion about Jennie’s life, career, successful clothing line for QVC and new book, "I Choose Me," an inspirational memoir about health, healing and happiness.

Newsday Live: Jennie Garth talks about career, health and happiness Newsday Live and Long Island LitFest present an evening with "Beverly Hills 90210" actress, podcaster and author Jennie Garth. Newsday's Elisa DiStefano hosts an in-depth discussion about Jennie's life, career, successful clothing line for QVC and new book, "I Choose Me," an inspirational memoir about health, healing and happiness.

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