The News-Times

Towns’ COVID test supplies gone quickly

- 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 distribute­d 39,000 to the Department of Mental Health and Addiction Services, 20,000 to faithbased 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.

South Windsor’s distributi­on was supposed to be from 2 to 6 p.m. Monday at Rye Park, and in a note on the town’s website, Maniscalco cautioned residents not to come too early, but police were reporting cars on the street by 10 a.m.

Edward and Marge Peruccio arrived at 10:15 a.m. and parked nearby, waiting for police to let people into the park. They were one of the first to get their test kits.

“This was basically our whole day, getting two test kits, but people wait three, four hours in line to get tested only to be told there’s no more tests, so we think it’s worth the wait,” Marge Peruccio said.

Farther back in the line, which stretched well over a mile in two directions, people fretted whether they’d make it to the front.

Franco and Judith Scalora arrived around 12:30 p.m. A family member had tested positive for COVID, and they were hoping to get the rapid tests kits rather than fight to get an appointmen­t at a testing site.

“We know of at least two family members who have now tested positive that we have been with recently, and since there just isn’t anywhere to get a test quickly, we thought it made sense to come and sit in line and get them here,” Judith Scalora said as they waited at least a half-mile from the park.

The scene was the same at several other locations on Monday. In Rocky Hill, officials gave out 1,500 test kits in about 90 minutes, according to Town Manager Stephen Pendl. In nearby Wethersfie­ld, cars packed the high school parking lot, and officials gave out 1,300 kits in barely an hour.

South Windsor ended up with 1,986 kits, about 1,500 fewer than originally slated. Like in most towns, some tests were held for first responders and for teachers.

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 “underpromi­sing and over delivering.”

 ?? Yehyun Kim / CTMirror.org ?? Cars wait to receive COVID-19 test kits at Wethersfie­ld High School. The city website announced distributi­on would begin at 10 a.m. But cars lined up at 6:30.
Yehyun Kim / CTMirror.org Cars wait to receive COVID-19 test kits at Wethersfie­ld High School. The city website announced distributi­on would begin at 10 a.m. But cars lined up at 6:30.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States