Stamford Advocate

Documents show 2M more COVID tests could arrive in CT this week

- By Dave Altimari

Long lines of angry residents were the norm in towns from Ansonia to South Windsor on Monday as local officials distribute­d what few at-home COVID test kids they had, then turned away people who had waited in their cars for hours.

In Ansonia, Mayor David Cassetti warned people in a robocall on Sunday night that the city had a limited supply of kits to give away at

Nolan Field on Monday morning. He cautioned people not to come and line up early, but people didn’t heed the request, and the line of cars stretched into neighborin­g Seymour and almost onto Route 8.

“There were a lot of people who were turned away without any test kits. People were blaming me, and it’s not my fault we got 2,600 kits for a city of 19,000 people,” Cassetti said. Ansonia ran out of kits in just over an hour.

But the state’s distributi­on of test kits may soon get a boost, as the state has agreements to purchase more than 2 million test kits at a cost of about $20 million, according to documents reviewed by The Connecticu­t Mirror. The tests are supposed to be arriving in the next few days.

The largest deal is with iHealth Labs of Sunnyvale, Calif., the same company the state thought it was getting three million kits from last week. The new purchase order with iHealth calls for the company to deliver 1,250,000 kits starting as early as Tuesday.

The state is paying 21 cents more per test to iHealth under the newest deal, the records show.

There is another purchase order with a company called Medical Solutions Inc. based in Brooklyn Park, Minn. That purchase order calls for the state to get 800,000 test kits at a cost of $4.2 million or about $5.34 each.

Those kits are supposed to be delivered by Wednesday, records show.

Purchase orders also show where the state bought the roughly 500,000 test kits that came in late last week after the initial deal fell through. All four of the shipments were from CVS Pharmacy. The state paid the Rhode Island-based company $6.2 million, records show.

Gov. Lamont’s spokesman Max Reiss said state officials have continued to search for more test kits since last week and more are expected in.

“The order of these tests reflects exactly what we’ve been saying, which is that we’re expanding our testing network to include these at-home rapid tests, and we’ve cast a wide net to get them into our state,” Reiss said. “We’re going to continue to distribute them as they come in to get them into our residents’ hands.”

As of midday Monday, the state had distribute­d 581,000 kits, Reiss said.

The majority of them, 540,000, went to municipali­ties, but the state also has distribute­d 39,000 to the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services, 20,000 to faith-based groups and smaller allotments to Food Share, Veteran’s Affairs, the state Department of Housing and the state Department of Developmen­tal Services.

‘Breaks a bit of trust’

Many local officials were still smarting from last week when they worked overtime to prepare to receive the test kits that never came.

“It was very disappoint­ing to be told to be ready quickly so we had to order people in off vacation or pay overtime only to get whiplash when the state said they didn’t have the tests,” South Windsor Town Manager Michael Maniscalco said Monday morning.

“It certainly wasn’t fair, and it breaks a bit of the trust with the state,” Maniscalco said.

It’s unclear how many test kits each community can expect now, because the state hasn’t publicized an updated list. The original list

determined by state Department of Public Health officials was sent to emergency management directors last week when the state anticipate­d getting 3 million tests.

But late last week, Lamont announced that those tests were never coming to Connecticu­t.

At a press conference Friday at the state’s warehouse in New Britain, Lamont said officials should not have publicized the test kit program until they had them in hand and that going forward they would be “under promising and over delivering.”

Lamont compared the hunt for test kits to the global search for masks back in the spring of 2020 when it was “like the Wild West.”

“It is complicate­d. It’s a little like it was for the masks back a year and a half ago. It’s not like Federal Express where they say it’s going to be delivered at 10 o’clock the next morning and if it’s not there, you get your money back,” Lamont said.

The wholesaler the state was working with on the deal, Jack Rubenstein CT

LLC of Glastonbur­y, had done business with the state previously and had helped the state procure millions of N95 masks at the beginning of the pandemic. In the last two years, the state paid the company nearly $15 million to procure PPE.

The state signed an $18.5 million purchase order with the Glastonbur­y company on Dec. 26. The agreement called for the wholesaler to deliver 1.5 million at home testing kits made by iHealth for the state, according to a purchase order.

Jack Rubenstein CT LLC is owned by Jeffrey Barlow. In a brief phone conversati­on with the CT Mirror on Thursday, Barlow said he couldn’t talk about the contract because he was busy.

“I’m in the middle of working on supply chain stuff right now,” Barlow said, adding he didn’t know yet when any kits would arrive in Connecticu­t, before politely saying he had to hang up.

The state hasn’t paid Barlow any of the $18.5 million yet, according to state comptrolle­r records.

 ?? Yehyun Kim / CTMirror.org ?? Long lines of angry residents were the norm in towns from Ansonia to South Windsor on Monday as local officials distribute­d what few at-home COVID test kids they had, then turned away people who had waited in their cars for hours.
Yehyun Kim / CTMirror.org Long lines of angry residents were the norm in towns from Ansonia to South Windsor on Monday as local officials distribute­d what few at-home COVID test kids they had, then turned away people who had waited in their cars for hours.

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