Los Angeles Times

City sends mobile testing units to hard- hit areas

L. A. dispatches teams to communitie­s of color that have seen high rates of cases.

- By Lil a Seidman

L. A. dispatches teams to communitie­s of color that have seen high rates of coronaviru­s infections.

Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti has dispatched five mobile coronaviru­s testing teams to predominan­tly Black and Latino communitie­s in the east San Fernando Valley and South Los Angeles, where infections nearly doubled in early December.

“Angelenos must remain vigilant in the face of this surge,” Garcetti said in a statement Tuesday, pointing to an explosion of cases across L. A. County and beyond in recent weeks.

On Sunday, L. A. County was averaging nearly 14,000 new coronaviru­s cases a day over the previous seven days and 78 new COVID- 19 deaths a day.

Communitie­s where the mobile units are headed have seen particular­ly dramatic increases relative to their population, according to the mayor’s office, which said it relies on county data to spot trends.

It’s no coincidenc­e; the areas are home to a large number of essential workers, who have not been able to stay in and avoid elevated

risk. They often live in highdensit­y living situations, where the virus can spread easily, Deputy Mayor Jeff Gorell said.

From powering the supply chain to working in stores and hotels, the workers “are keeping us af loat through the pandemic,” Gorell said.

For the week ending Dec. 4, the East Valley accounted for 26% of all new cases citywide, and South L. A. made up 19%.

The number of cases in Van Nuys increased 74%

from the week before, Pacoima surged 92% and the neighborho­ods of Florence-Firestone, Vernon, Sun Valley and Canoga Park saw increases of more than 100%.

Rapidly increasing case rates in the East Valley led the mayor’s office to launch a testing site at San Fernando Park last month.

Each mobile site has the capacity to test around 1,000 people a day, kicking up the city’s current capacity of 41,000 tests across its 10 permanent sites.

The city is operating at

the upper limits of capacity, Gorell said.

Each day, the city’s roughly 37,000 appointmen­t slots are booked. About 4,000 people who show up without appointmen­ts are accommodat­ed, according to the mayor’s office.

Turnaround time for tests is now about 37 hours, Gorell said, an increase from less than 24 hours a few weeks ago.

Appointmen­ts are not necessary to access the mobile sites but can be made online.

 ?? A CORONAVIRU­S Christina House Los Angeles Times ?? testing kit is dropped off at a South L. A. hospital in April. On Sunday, L. A. County was averaging nearly 14,000 new coronaviru­s cases a day.
A CORONAVIRU­S Christina House Los Angeles Times testing kit is dropped off at a South L. A. hospital in April. On Sunday, L. A. County was averaging nearly 14,000 new coronaviru­s cases a day.

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