Miami Herald (Sunday)

Rapid COVID tests rolling out at Florida-run sites

- BY BEN CONARCK bconarck@miamiheral­d.com

The state of Florida is switching to Abbott Labs BinaxNOW rapid COVID tests at its state-run Division of Emergency Management coronaviru­s testing sites to shorten turnaround time.

At the height of Florida’s summer COVID-19 surge, with cars snaking in single-file lanes waiting to get tested and results not coming until weeks later, public health efforts to trace and isolate the virus’ spread ground to a halt.

By the time Florida officials fixed the problem — ditching slow-moving labs, offering quicker tests and cutting wait times — the number of new people getting tested per day had dropped by more than half, from 25,000 to 30,000 since September, versus approximat­ely 60,000 in late July, according to the

COVID Tracking Project.

glimpse of the president.

He emerged from his private voting room around 10:17 a.m. With library stacks behind him, he quickly stopped to tell reporters he felt more secure voting in person, as opposed to mailing in his ballot. He also shared his predictabl­e pick for the presidency.

“I voted for a guy named Trump,” he said, before leaving in a motorcade for the airport.

The president’s campaign organized events outside early voting locations in Miami-Dade, Naples, Jacksonvil­le, Pensacola and Tampa. Large screens streamed the moments after Trump’s vote.

EARLY VOTERS CHEER IN MIAMI-DADE

Outside the Westcheste­r Regional Library in West Miami-Dade County, about 50 people gathered on the lawn of Francisco Human Rights Park, where a big screen showed

Trump moments after he cast his ballot and as he addressed reporters, eliciting cheers from the Westcheste­r crowd.

Many of them waited to cast an early ballot Saturday morning, just hours before the president cast his own. They cheered the president and other Republican candidates down the ballot.

“We’re here especially for Maria Elvira Salazar, Esteban Bovo and Donald Trump, who is the priority. We’re here for the main thing, which is him, honestly,” said Gloria Molina, a 58-year-old Nicaraguan voter who cast her early ballot Saturday. Salazar is a Republican running for Congress in Miami. Bovo is a Republican running for Miami-Dade mayor.

Molina and her husband, Eduardo Jorge, both said they wanted to see their vote being counted in person, as opposed to sending a mail ballot, because they didn’t trust vote-by-mail, a process the president has repeatedly sought to brand as untrustwor­thy.

“I know there’s a lot of tricky stuff with the voteby-mail, that’s why I don’t trust it,” said Jorge, 56, who is Cuban American.

Also at the event in Westcheste­r: Florida Lt. Gov. Jeannette Nuñez, co-chair of Latinos for

Trump, who voted in person.

On the other side of the library — and political spectrum — local Democratic candidates and a crowd of about 50 supporters gathered near a colorful Colombian chiva bus, as a few women danced cumbia, a Latin American folk dance, and wore full white pollera skirts decorated in red, yellow and blue. A musician was banging on a caja vallenata, a drum made with cow-skin.

U.S. Rep. Debbie Mucarsel-Powell, Miami-Dade commission­er and mayoral candidate Daniella Levine Cava also made appearance­s, using the opportunit­y to blast Mayor Carlos’ Gimenez’s decision to veto the idea of turning the American Airlines Arena into a voter precinct. Gimenez is Mucarsel-Powell’s challenger for the District 26 congressio­nal seat.

Many of the Democratic supporters said they had already voted — by mail. Lisandra Miller, 48, said her whole family had voted by mail.

“I work for the post office so I know it is [trustworth­y],” she said. “We don’t sell votes ... We put everything in the mail stream and everything goes straight to the Department of Elections, so we don’t throw anything away. That’s just rhetoric.”

Miller, who wore a Mucarsel-Powell face mask, added that she voted Democratic all the way down the ballot because she felt it was important to keep Democrats in power at the congressio­nal level.

“[Trump] hasn’t changed anything,” Miller said. “He’s just made everything worse.”

More than 12,000 people had already voted at the Westcheste­r library, which serves a largely Cuban-American community in West Miami-Dade County. It has been one of the busiest voting centers in South Florida and an indicator of Trump’s support among Cuban-Americans and Republican­s’ zeal to vote in person at the polls before Election Day.

GOP, DEMOCRATS VOTING DIFFERENTL­Y

Trump is banking on big Republican turnout at early voting centers before Nov. 3 to help minimize Florida Democrats’ mail voting edge.

About 575,000 more

Democrats than Republican­s have voted by mail since late September in Florida. But Republican­s have outnumbere­d Democrats at early voting locations by about 190,000 during five days of early voting.

The numbers are a reversal of nearly two decades of early and mail voting trends in Florida, in which Republican­s have built advantages through the mail and Democrats popularize­d early voting centers. The coronaviru­s pandemic fueled the transition, as the response to COVID-19 pushed Democrats to view mail ballots as a safer option — and Trump to attack the security of mail voting, at times repeating falsities about discarded mail ballots.

Trump’s inaccurate characteri­zations of mail voting, though, don’t appear to have diminished the party’s mail voting numbers. Florida Republican­s were likely to set a party record Saturday for number of mail ballots cast in an election at more than 1.1 million, topping their 2016 numbers with 10 days still to go before Election Day.

Republican­s didn’t keep pace with Democrats as the pandemic fueled record vote-by-mail ballots cast.

Instead, Republican­s are showing up big during early voting. And Trump wants them to show up to avoid needing a massive Election Day push to win his home state — a battlegrou­nd he can’t afford to lose.

Democrats, who tend to vote in greater numbers on weekends, were also looking for a big South Florida Saturday. Former President Barack Obama staged a drive-in rally Saturday in North Miami, and Biden’s campaign organized a series of events around the state.

Trump cast his ballot the morning after campaignin­g in The Villages retirement community in Central Florida and in Pensacola. After voting, he was scheduled to campaign Saturday in North Carolina, another crucial battlegrou­nd for the president.

 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States