Trump administration sending rapid COVID tests to states, CDC bars
evictions
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[September 02, 2020]
By Dan Whitcomb
(Reuters) - The Trump administration will
send most of its newly purchased 150 million rapid COVID-19 tests to
U.S. states for schools and critical services, a White House official
said on Tuesday, as New York City pushed back reopening classrooms in a
deal with union leaders.
The moves came as The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention on
Tuesday issued a sweeping order temporarily halting landlords across the
nation from evicting millions of tenants in what it said was an effort
to reduce the spread of coronavirus.
The order covers all 43 million U.S. residential renters as long as they
meet income eligibility requirements, although an administration
official said the government does not expect an "overwhelming" use of
the program.
The daily number of infections has been in decline across most of the
United States in recent weeks, with 36,263 reported on Monday, less than
half of the mid-July peak, according to a Reuters tally.
Exceptions include Midwest states such as South Dakota, where hundreds
of thousands of motorcycle riders gathered for a rally in August, and
Iowa.
A total of more than 183,000 people have died so far from complications
of COVID-19, including 32,647 in New York and nearly 16,000 in New
Jersey, the U.S. states with the highest death tolls.
In announcing that the "overwhelming majority" of 150 rapid antigen
tests purchased from Abbot Laboratories <ABT.N> would be sent to state
governors, U.S. Health and Human Services Assistant Secretary Admiral
Brett Giror said top priorities included day care centers and first
responders.
The portable tests can deliver results within 15 minutes and will sell
for $5. They require no additional equipment, and can use a less
invasive nasal swab than traditional lab tests.
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A healthcare worker uses a swab to test a man at a coronavirus
disease (COVID-19) drive-in testing location in Houston, Texas,
U.S., August 18, 2020. REUTERS/Adrees Latif
President Donald Trump has pushed for schools across the country to
reopen classrooms, but many districts have ordered students to stay
home and learn online.
Among them are Los Angeles and San Diego Counties, the second and
third-largest school districts in the nation respectively.
In New York City, Mayor Bill de Blasio said an agreement had been
reached with reluctant teachers union leaders to reopen school
buildings to students on September 21 as part of his plan for a mix
of in-class and remote learning.
"What we’ve agreed to is to make sure that the health measures are
in place, to make sure there is time for the appropriate preparation
for our educators," de Blasio said at a news briefing.
Earlier this week New Jersey and California eased some restrictions
imposed in the face of the pandemic, allowing restaurants to begin
limited indoor dining.
New York City's mayor has ruled out allowing restaurants to serve
diners indoors anytime soon.
(Reporting by Dan Whitcomb, Vishwadha Chander, Carl O'Donnell, Peter
Szekely, Maria Caspani and David Shepardson; Editing by Bill Tarrant
and Michael Perry)
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