The Guardian (USA)

Los Angeles reverses plans to close Covid-19 testing site for film shoot

- Lois Beckett in Los Angeles

Los Angeles reversed the planned closure of a downtown coronaviru­s testing site, after the news that the center would be closed because of a film shoot for the remake of the popular teen comedy She’s All That was met with widespread uproar.

Eric Garcetti, the Los Angeles mayor, confirmed on Twitter late on Monday night that the Covid-19 testing center at Union Station in downtown would remain open.

More than 500 people who were scheduled to get a coronaviru­s test at the center on Tuesday had received a series of conflictin­g messages, first cancelling and then reinstatin­g their appointmen­t for tests, according to the mayor’s office.

In a statement, the mayor’s office said officials had learned of the closure of the testing site on Monday, and that “as soon as this was brought to our attention”, the city first contacted the 504 people affected by the closure to let them know that they could use their appointmen­t for a test at any other testing location. In a tweet sent after midnight, the mayor announced that the Union Station testing site would in fact remain open, and that residents could get their tests “as originally planned”.

“The property management company for Union Station notified the mayor’s office that the Covid-19 testing kiosk there would need to close due to a film shoot. As soon as this was brought to our attention, we began efforts to reopen it,” said Andrea Garcia, a spokeswoma­n for the mayor, in another statement on Tuesday.

The film shoot in question was Miramax’s reboot of the popular 1999 teen movie She’s All That, now starring the TikTok influencer Addison Rae Easterling.

He’s All That will feature Easterling as an influencer who makes a bet she can transform a school loser into the prom king. Easterling has 70 million followers and is estimated to be one of TikTok’s highest earners.

The movie received a permit to film on location at Los Angeles’ Union Station on 1 December. FilmLA, which handles location permitting for the city of Los Angeles, said that a cast and crew of about 170 people was expected on site, and that the permitting organizati­on had not initially been aware that there was a coronaviru­s testing site at the location.

On Monday afternoon, a local homelessne­ss advocacy group posted on Twitter about an email from Curative, the company that runs Covid-19 testing for Los Angeles, saying that the company had to cancel all tests at the Union Station on Monday “due to an event being held at this location”.

“We know this is a huge inconvenie­nce and again apologize for the delayed notificati­on!” the email read.

KTown for All’s furious tweet about Los Angeles cancelling coronaviru­s tests for a film shoot “in the middle of a horrible and terrifying Covid spike” quickly went viral.

The group said in a statement that the incident was not surprising, criticizin­g Los Angeles as “a city that says it is extremely concerned about the spread of Covid-19, and yet actively infringes day after day on the safety and health of its most vulnerable citizens.”

The group, as well as other local activists, argued the attempt to shutter the Union Station coronaviru­s testing location for a day at the height of the pandemic was particular­ly egregious, since it was one of the walk-up testing locations most accessible to people who use public transit. Many of Los Angeles’ largest testing locations are only accessible to people in cars.

 ??  ?? People arrive for a coronaviru­s test at Union Station in Los Angeles, California, last month. Photograph: Frederic J Brown/AFP/Getty Images
People arrive for a coronaviru­s test at Union Station in Los Angeles, California, last month. Photograph: Frederic J Brown/AFP/Getty Images

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