EATONTOWN – Travelers
to the Newark Liberty International Airport from West Africa who may
have been exposed to the deadly Ebola virus could be housed at Fort
Monmouth, under "confidential" contingency plans discussed by government
officials.
Eatontown Mayor Dennis Connelly said Monday no
possible Ebola patients are at the fort now or have ever been, and that
he does not believe the quarantine facility has opened. The New Jersey
Department of Human Services confirmed that they have a six-month
agreement with the fort, but a spokeswoman would divulge no specifics.
"We're
not happy about it being placed there," Connelly said. "On the same
token, I don't believe we're at any risk. We've been assured that these
are people who don't have any symptoms; they just may been exposed, and
if they begin to show symptoms, like a fever, they would be transferred
out to another facility."
Local
opinions were not solicited before the decision was made, according to a
statement from Monmouth County Freehold Lillian Burry and the three
mayors of the towns that surround the fort.
"This lease was
imposed on (the Fort Monmouth Economic Revitalization Authority) by the
executive branch and was not vetted at a public meeting or voted on by
the entire Board," the statement reads. "The lease was actually signed
by the Attorney General and was not supported by the Board as a whole."
Oceanport Mayor Michael Mahon said he was "deeply disappointed" that the state chose the fort as a quarantine location.
"The
action by the state is taken without transparency and the benefit of a
broad discussion of concerns, risks, and protective measures to
safeguard public health with the local stakeholders," Mahon told the
Asbury Park Press.
The
DHS says the department "communicated often with local and county
officials, as well as with representatives of (the Fort Monmouth
Economic Revitalization Authority), throughout the process." FMERA,
which was created to take control of the decommissioned base's land with
an eye toward commercial development, referred all questions to the
DHS, which declined to comment beyond a short statement.
Under
New Jersey's Ebola Preparedness Plan, unveiled by Gov. Chris Christie
in October, individuals who arrive in Newark from West Africa and who
the state department of health determines to be "at risk" — not
including New Jersey residents or those showing symptoms of infection —
are to be quarantined at a state-provided facility for 21 days.
According
to Connelly, the plan is for Fort Monmouth to take patients in the
event that the quarantine at Hagedorn Psychiatric Hospital in Hunterdon
County hits capacity. No quarantine locations in New Jersey have been
used to this point, a DHS spokeswoman said.
The facility would be
within the Suneagles Golf Course property, which the FMERA is actively
attempting to sell, according to Tinton Falls Mayor Gerald Turning.
"It makes it difficult to market or sell this property," Turning said.
Excluding
local sentiment out of the selection process could undermine the
continued collaboration between the state and local governments that is
necessary to carry out the redevelopment plan, according to Burry and
the mayors.
"Such action should not be repeated in the future," their statement warns.
It
was Turning's understanding that the agreement, which he says was
worked out between the U.S. Army and the state, expires at the end of
June, but that it could be extended. The U.S. Army did not immediately
respond to a message seeking comment.
Discussions about the
contingencies began with DHS in November, Connelly said, but were kept
confidential. He shared the information publicly after information was
sent by DHS to borough fire and first-aid officials, who had no idea
about the plans.
Ebola
is a rare and deadly virus transmitted through direct contact with the
blood or bodily fluids of someone who has Ebola, or through contact with
the body of someone who died from the virus, according to the U.S.
Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
As of Jan. 27, 8,829
people in West Africa have been killed by the virus. There have been
four confirmed cases in the U.S., including one man who died in Texas in
October and a medical aid worker who was diagnosed in late October in
New York City and later recovered.
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