Marino Joins Letter to Urge Obama for Tougher Actions Against Ebola

Oct 10, 2014 Issues: Defense and National Security, Health

 

For Immediate Release

October 9, 2014

Rep. Marino Joins Letter to Urge Obama for Tougher Actions Against Ebola

Washington DC - Rep. Tom Marino signed on the letter listed below, along with 27 of his House colleagues urging President Obama to take tougher actions on fighting the Ebola virus. The letter, sign by both Democrats and Republicans, calls for a stricter but commonsense approach to ensuring Ebola does not infect or spread to more Americans.

See the original copy of the letter as well as every co-signer here.

You can read the full text of the letter below:

Dear President Obama:

With three nations in Africa currently facing an Ebola epidemic, our government must take aggressive action to combat and prevent the spread of this disease in the United States. We strongly urge the Administration to take immediate and decisive action to protect and prevent American citizens from further exposure to the deadly Ebola virus disease. The United States needs to institute travel restrictions, enhanced airport screening and possible quarantine of individuals who have traveled to, or from, the West African countries that have been most impacted by this tragic Ebola epidemic.

In Dallas, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) recently confirmed the first patient diagnosed with Ebola in the United States. Now, an estimated 50 individuals who had contact with that individual in Dallas are being monitored for symptoms of Ebola, as well. In addition, a freelance NBC cameraman covering the outbreak in Monrovia, Liberia tested positive for Ebola and is being treated in Nebraska. He is the fifth confirmed American diagnosed with Ebola.

According to the CDC, individuals who have been exposed to Ebola likely will show signs of the disease within 21 days of exposure, but not necessarily before then.  Hence not only are we at risk from travelers showing symptoms of the disease, but also asymptomatic travelers who harbor the disease and become symptomatic and contagious after arrival.  We urge you to direct the CDC, in coordination with the Department of Homeland Security, to order our customs and border agents to begin more active screening of travelers to and from affected countries in West Africa, to prevent further exposure to Ebola in the United States.

Furthermore, these agencies should also consider a possible quarantine for any individual who has traveled to or from affected countries in West Africa within the dormancy period, aside from responsible health and military personnel sent there to fight the disease, to ensure that they have not contracted Ebola and are not contagious.  Lastly, we ask the State Department to impose a travel ban and restrict travel visas issued to citizens of the West African countries experiencing this epidemic, until such countries have defeated the epidemic.  Such a ban should be instituted by suspending earlier-issued visas until further notice, halting the issuance of such visas, and denying entry to the nationals of such counties upon presentation of a passport from those countries at our ports of entry.  We note that Congressman Grayson made this request to your administration in July, and that 27 African countries already have taken such action to protect their own citizens, but the United States inexplicably has not.

You have suggested that you will not take such action until the World Health Organization (WHO) recommends it.  We specifically call on you not to “pass the buck” on this crucial issue.  WHO is an organization of unelected bureaucrats and political appointees of foreign countries.  It has no duty to protect the lives and well-being of Americans, as you do.  Furthermore, it has utterly failed to stem this epidemic through its own action.  The responsibility for this decision is yours, not theirs.

Please note that we support all efforts to provide humanitarian relief to the stricken countries in question, and that the measures that we propose should not be misconstrued as a substitute for such relief.  Additionally, such measures are meant to protect Americans from citizens of the affected countries who, wittingly or unwittingly, harbor the disease, and these measures are not meant to constrain American citizens in any manner not already in effect under our health laws.  Finally, we do not intend that such measures impede trade with any of the countries in question, nor that they last for any period beyond the current crisis.

Because of its extraordinary and unprecedented death rate, the current Ebola outbreak is, by far, one of the most challenging global health epidemics that the world has faced in decades.  It is of the utmost importance that your Administration take these commonsense steps to protect U.S. citizens from this Ebola epidemic.

Sincerely,

Tom Marino,

Member of Congress

CC:      Secretary John Kerry. U.S. Department of State

            Secretary Jeh Johnson, U.S. Department of Homeland Secretary

            Director Tom Frieden, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention