LITTLE ROCK, Arkansas — A group of CDC investigators have filed a report on Arkansas’s coronavirus response which finds fault with the state’s “inconsistent messages from authorities, changing guidance and the reopening of the state” and the impact it has had on people of color, according to a recent report by Politico.

Investigators from the CDC reportedly were in northwest Arkansas to study why people in the Latino and Marshallese communities are being disproportionately affect by COVID-19.

“Their report alludes to a host of state and federal government failures to protect vulnerable communities of color, and makes several recommendations that the state epidemiologist said will be impossible to implement without more federal support — such as notifying people of positive test results in 24 hours, testing certain at-risk groups every week, hiring more bilingual contact tracers and hammering home messages about the dangers of gathering in groups and not wearing masks,” the Politico article stated.

Although the Latino communities in Benton and Washington counties make up roughly 17% of the population, they account for 45% of reported cases.

And the Marshelle communities account for about 20% of cases even though Pacific Islanders make up 1.5% of the population. Pacific Islanders account for 38% of deaths in those two counties as well.

The CDC investigators credit inconsistent messaging from officials for “misinformation, myths and uncertainty about all aspects of prevent, testing and treatment.”

A report filed by the team suggests that Arkansas government pay workers to stay home, but Dr. Jennifer Dillaha reportedly told Politico report Alice Miranda Ollstein that “the state does not have the resources to do this.” Dillaha also reportedly said she’s looking at partnering with local churches and non-governmental organizations to “better support families in quarantine.”

The CDC report also reportedly said that business owners are concerned about customers not wearing masks but “felt that they couldn’t enforce it.”

Arkansas has seen 15,450 new cases since Governor Asa Hutchinson moved to Phase Two of reopening. That accounts for roughly 54% of the known cases in Arkansas.