Cleaners wipe down the briefing room doors before the daily coronavirus task force press briefing at the White House.

A White House unit operating under Vice President Mike Pence’s coronavirus task force has been instructed to vacate where it was working after a “partner” of the unit tested positive, according to a new report.

An email sent by Federal Emergency Management Agency officials Monday evening, and obtained by NBC News, told staff members of the Supply Chain Resilience task force that they were “required to telework” as a result of the positive test.

“Until further notice, all personnel in the Supply Chain Resilience task force” on a particular floor of one of FEMA’s buildings “and the FEMA Conference Center are required to telework,” the email read.

The outlet said Adm. John Polowczyk, who leads the group and makes regular appearances at White House coronavirus briefings, was listed among members of his unit as a recipient of the email.

The supply chain unit handles the acquisition, distribution and shipment of goods that fight the virus and is a sub-group working as a part of Pence’s operation.

It is not immediately clear who the partner who tested positive for the virus was in terms of having any contact with Polowczyk or Pence.

It is also unclear what working remotely will do to the specific work the task force was doing.

The Post could not immediately reach a spokesperson for Polowczyk through the Joint Chiefs of Staff.

A spokesperson for FEMA told The Post in a statement, “On April 6, a federal employee working in support of federal response efforts, at the FEMA Headquarters building in Washington, D.C., tested positive for COVID-19. Consistent with known U.S. Department of Health & Human Services, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention-approved protocols, FEMA will facilitate cleaning to ensure the potentially affected workspace meets federal health and safety standards.”