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San Antonio: CDC planned to drop cruise passengers at mall

Federal health officials planned to drop off some cruise ship passengers at a shopping mall after their release from a two-week quarantine at a Texas air base, one of several reasons the city of San Antonio declared a public health emergency over the new coronavirus, a city spokeswoman said Tuesday.

The city filed a lawsuit Monday to halt the plan after a woman was mistakenly released from quarantine at a health care facility over the weekend despite testing positive. She had visited the North Star Mall - the same one where the some of those released from Lackland Air Force Base were to be dropped off - before the mistake was discovered, prompting the mall to shut down for deep cleaning.

Laura Mayes, spokeswoman for the city of San Antonio, said that knowing about the plan from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention was 'œpart of why the city wanted to pause it, to minimize the threat to the community."

'œWe wanted to make sure things were orderly and done with as limited exposure as possible to the public," Mayes said. City officials also wanted more patient testing to assure nobody who was released tested positive.

A CDC spokesman reached after hours Tuesday did not comment on the plan involving the mall and would not say where the patient was released over the weekend. She said local, state and federal agencies helped coordinate the Lackland departures.

'œMany factors were taken into consideration when determining how best to return the evacuees to their communities as safely as possible,'ť CDC spokeswoman Carol Williams said in an email.

Lindsay Kahn, a spokeswoman for Brookfield Properties, which manages North Star Mall, said Wednesday that the company was not informed about any plan to drop off passengers and had no information about the person who was released over the weekend.

Mayes said 122 passengers were released Tuesday, while seven remained in quarantine. Many passengers were bused to San Antonio International Airport, where they were escorted to ticket counters and through security. Others who live in Texas were escorted to car rental counters.

Passenger Terri Feil of Houston said a CDC official told them in a conference call Sunday that the mall, about 17 miles (27 kilometers) from the base, was chosen to avoid the media.

Feil said only people who were not going to the airport were to be dropped off at the mall. The Feils showed The Associated Press a text message they said was from the CDC indicating they were to be dropped off at the entrance by The Cheesecake Factory.

'œMy husband was asking, '~Who made this decision?''ť said Feil, adding that the couple's son was driving from Houston to pick them up.

Feil and her husband, David Feil, were among at least four passengers released late Monday after CDC officials said they were free to go. Their son picked them up at a Lackland gate around midnight.

'œWe were jumping up and down for joy,'ť said Terri Feil. 'œWe were not going to give one person a chance to change their mind."

She said being isolated from family and other passengers since February 'œwas like a nightmare you just kept waking up to each and every day."

San Antonio Mayor Ron Nirenberg, who had earlier said that only passengers who were symptom-free for the entire 14-day quarantine period would be released Tuesday, issued a statement saying he was 'œcomfortable that the plan ... will minimize the risk of exposure,'ť and that passengers would not stay in local hotels and would go directly to the airport.

The patient who was released over the weekend visited the mall and the airport before she was brought back into isolation once the positive test was discovered, city officials said. There have not been any known cases of the illness being transmitted in the community, Nirenberg said.

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This story was corrected to say a woman was released from a health care facility, not from Lackland Air Force Base, over the weekend.

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Webber reported from Chicago. Associated Press reporters Jill Bleed in Little Rock, Arkansas, and Terry Wallace in Dallas contributed to this story.

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The Associated Press receives support for health and science coverage from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute's Department of Science Education. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

A man and a woman, both evacuees from the coronavirus-infected Diamond Princess cruise ship in Japan, give thumbs up after using hand sanitizer having just arrived at the San Antonio International Airport from Joint Base San Antonio Lackland where they were quarentined, on Tuesday, March 3, 2020. (William Luther/The San Antonio Express-News via AP) The Associated Press
American passengers evacuated from a cruise ship in Japan disembark from a Kalitta Air flight at Kelly Field, early Monday, Feb. 17, 2020 in San Antonio, Texas. The U.S. said it arranged the evacuation because people on the Diamond Princess were at a high risk of exposure to the new virus that's been spreading in Asia. For the departing Americans, the evacuation cuts short a 14-day quarantine that began aboard the cruise ship Feb. 5. (William Luther /The San Antonio Express-News via AP) The Associated Press
People arrive at the San Antonio International Airport Tuesday, March 3, 2020 after being released from quarantine at JBSA-Lackland. The people were evacuated from the coronavirus-infected Diamond Princess cruise ship in Japan and had been held in quarantine at Lackland to ensure they were not infected with the virus. (William Luther/The San Antonio Express-News via AP) The Associated Press
American passengers evacuated from a cruise ship in Japan disembark from a Kalitta Air flight at Kelly Field, early Monday, Feb. 17, 2020 in San Antonio, Texas. The U.S. said it arranged the evacuation because people on the Diamond Princess were at a high risk of exposure to the new virus that's been spreading in Asia. For the departing Americans, the evacuation cuts short a 14-day quarantine that began aboard the cruise ship Feb. 5. (William Luther /The San Antonio Express-News via AP) The Associated Press
People arrive at the San Antonio International Airport Tuesday, March 3, 2020 after being released from quarantine at JBSA-Lackland. The people were evacuated from the coronavirus-infected Diamond Princess cruise ship in Japan and had been held in quarantine at Lackland to ensure they were not infected with the virus. (William Luther/The San Antonio Express-News via AP) The Associated Press
People arrive at the San Antonio International Airport Tuesday, March 3, 2020 after being released from quarantine at JBSA-Lackland. The people were evacuated from the coronavirus-infected Diamond Princess cruise ship in Japan and had been held in quarantine at Lackland to ensure they were not infected with the virus. (William Luther/The San Antonio Express-News via AP) The Associated Press
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