
BY KEVIN DUGGAN
As drive-through coronavirus
testing sites continue to
crop up across the city, a group
of Park Slope civic leaders are
calling on the mayor to open
more facilities for those who
don’t have cars — an estimated
55 percent of city households.
“We need a policy that allows
people without access to cars
to be tested at the same rate as
car owners, and the sooner it is
implemented the better,” wrote
Community Board 6 Chairman
Peter Fleming and Transportation
Committee Chairman
Eric McClure in an April 15
letter. “We urge City Hall and
all relevant agencies to move
as quickly as possible to implement
a means of testing that
isn’t car-dependent.”
The city plans to open its
fi rst fi ve testing facilities that
aren’t at a public hospital this
week — one in East New York
and four others in black and hispanic
COURIER L 12 IFE, APRIL 24-30, 2020
neighborhoods in each of
the other boroughs, communities
which have disproportionately
been affected by the respiratory
illness.
At his April 16 press briefing,
de Blasio declined to reveal
any plans for testing sites
beyond that, citing the ongoing
shortage of test kits, personal
protective equipment, and
medical staff. He said the city
should focus on those who need
it most, including people in lifethreatening
conditions, healthcare
workers, fi rst responders,
and the communities hardest
hit by the virus.
“The notion of people saying,
‘Hey I just want to make
it really easy to get testing in
my own community.’ I get that
100 percent why people feel
that,” he said. “We’ve got to do
something more strategic than
that.”
The mayor did hint that his
offi ce plans to reveal more information
on testing once supplies
start to increase in the
coming weeks, when he anticipates
the city to start making
its own testing kits in addition
to buying hundreds of thousands
from an out-of-state diagnostics
company and ramping
up production of protective
equipment in the city.
“I’ll have more to say on
that as testing supplies start
to increase, but I want people
to think about this as strategic,
this is about how we end
this crisis, not so much just
you go some place and you get
a test that tells you at one point
in time how you’re doing,” he
said.
The state has opened several
drive-through testing sites
since mid-March, including
most recently in the parking
lot of Sears on Beverly Road in
The recently-opened drive-through testing site in the Sears parking lot
in Flatbush. Photo by Lloyd Mitchell
Flatbush and Albany offi cials
plan to unveil a walk-in facility
in Brownsville some time this
week.
Earlier this week, staff at
the Flatbush facility turned
away people without cars, even
telling some to hop in an Uber
in order to get tested, Streetsblog
reported.
It is currently unclear where
or on what day the state Brownsville
facility will open and press
offi ces for both Gov. Andrew
Cuomo and the New York State
Department of Health did not
immediately return a request
for comment.
De Blasio previously said
that the city facilities would
be coming to existing Health +
Hospital outposts and the only
such location in East New York
is Gotham Health on Pitkin
and Pennsylvania avenues. The
mayor’s offi ce did not immediately
respond to an inquiry
about its location or when it
would start testing, but Hizzoner
indicated at his briefi ng
that “some of the sites” in the
fi ve boroughs would open on
April 17.
“We’ll have sites up, starting
tomorrow, some of the sites
I’ve talked about in some of the
most hard-hit communities,”
he said.
Driving them nuts
Park Slope civic leaders demand more
walk-in COVID-19 testing centers