Newsom slammed for California student COVID test shortage

Newsom slammed for California student COVID test shortage

SeattlePI.com

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SAN FRANCISCO (AP) — As the number of COVID-19 cases surge in California, Gov. Gavin Newsom and state officials are facing criticism for failing to deliver on a promise to provide rapid, at-home tests to all California students and school staff before classrooms reopened after the winter break.

Millions of test kits were sent to families before and during winter break but millions more were not — raising concerns about public school safety now that the state's 6 million K-12 students are returning to classrooms amid soaring rates of COVID-19 cases.

The California Department of Public Health has said it sent about 2 million rapid tests to school districts at the beginning of December.

A few days before Christmas, Newsom announced a plan to purchase 6 million more test kits for students.

The goal was to ensure students could safely return to campuses “knowing that they have not contracted the disease over the holidays,” Newsom said at the time.

About half of those test kits were delivered to local governments and school districts last week. Others never arrived due in part to “distribution challenges” and delays caused by winter storms, California schools chief Tony Thurmond told reporters on Wednesday.

Thurman called the delay “disappointing."

“We have 10,000 schools in the state so it’s a daunting task, but we’ve got to find ways to make it happen in a more accelerated way," he said.

In an editorial published Tuesday, the Los Angeles Times asked where are all the COVID tests that Newsom promised for K-12 schools.

“Too many California kids went back to school this week without knowing whether they’re spreading the highly contagious Omicron variant,” the editorial said.

In schools that did get the tests, the results...

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