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See the latest news and updates about COVID-19 and its impact on the Charlotte region, the Carolinas and beyond.

NC Health Officials Find Contact Tracing Partners, Call For People To Sign Up

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North Carolina Health and Human Services Secretary Mandy Cohen gives an update on the coronavirus pandemic.
File/NCDHHS

North Carolina announced Monday two partners in its effort to boost the number of contact tracers for the coronavirus. Hiring starts immediately and people can apply online.

One of Gov. Roy Cooper’s benchmarks for reopening the state is the ability to do adequate levels of contact tracing. That's the process of identifying people who have been in contact with known positive cases of the coronavirus. The goal is to prevent more infections.

State health officials are now partnering with Community Care of North Carolina and the North Carolina Area Health Education Centers. The partnership is called the Carolina Community Tracing Collaborative.

At a press briefing Monday, North Carolina Health and Human Services Secretary Mandy Cohen encouraged people who want to become contact tracers tobegin their application online.

"Special consideration will be given to those who are unemployed, have community engagement experience, and live in the communities that they will serve," Cohen said.

Cohen said the partnership would hire 250 additional staff members, with the possibility of hiring more. These contact tracers would supplement the tracing efforts of county health departments around the state.

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Michael Falero is a radio reporter, currently covering voting and the 2020 election. He previously covered environment and energy for WFAE. Before joining WFAE in 2019, Michael worked as a producer for a number of local news podcasts based in Charlotte and Boston. He's a graduate of the Transom Story Workshop intensive on Cape Cod and UNC Chapel Hill.