CLEVELAND, Ohio — Eleven Cuyahoga County Jail officers came into close contact with six inmates who tested positive Friday for the coronavirus, a union official said.

Ohio Patrolmen’s Benevolent Association attorney Adam Chaloupka said the officers were ordered to quarantine for 14 days before returning to work. The officers will return to work only if they’re free of symptoms.

No corrections officers have tested positive for the virus as of Friday. Chaloupka said those numbers could rise as jail and board of health officials identify more officers who came into close contact with the inmates who tested positive.

Chaloupka said the officers all had come into close contact with the inmates in the past 48 hours, that at some point they were less than six feet away from the inmates for 10 minutes or longer and were not wearing any personal protective equipment.

He also said county officials on Friday distributed personal protective equipment to the officers and came up with a plan on how to use it. All officers were given surgical masks and gloves.

The officers working in the housing units with the six inmates who tested positive for the virus were given N95 masks, gowns, foot covers and goggles, he said.

Cuyahoga County Executive Armond Budish earlier on Friday said he believes the county jail has enough personal protective equipment for the time being, but wanted more.

The six inmates who tested positive all lived in the same area of the jail, as did two others that are suspected of having the virus.

The rest of the inmates in the same housing unit are locked into that area and are not allowed to move throughout the jail.

The inmates began showing symptoms of the virus late Thursday and the tests results came back positive in the middle of the night, officials said earlier on Friday.

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