With Vaccine mandate looming, hundreds of school districts tapping into
COVID testing program
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[September 18, 2021]
By Greg Bishop
(The Center Square) – With Gov. J.B.
Pritzker’s COVID-19 vaccine mandate for educators in effect Sunday, it’s
expected COVID-19 testing will increase and some are calling for
additional oversight of the testing program and the money spent on it.
Pritzker’s vaccine mandate for health care workers, college students and
educators from Pre-K through college, says those that can’t or won’t
take the vaccine must submit to weekly testing. For K-12 schools, a $235
million program provides the U of I’s SHIELD tests at no cost to the
district.
“In the five-week period since Aug. 15, SHIELD Illinois has conducted
approximately 133,000 tests for public K-12 schools and 24,000 tests for
non-public K-12 schools in Illinois,” said SHIELD Illinois marketing and
communications lead Ben Taylor.
The tests cost $35 each. Up to $10 of that could go to a third-party
contractor that collects and delivers the test from the school to a lab.
The fees are invoiced by SHIELD Illinois to the Illinois Department of
Public health based on the test count at no cost to the school.
IDPH said 449 school districts have signed up with SHIELD and 94 are
currently using the program. Around a hundred other districts are
expected to launch in the next two weeks.
“The remaining schools are going through the onboarding process and we
are working with SHIELD to get them online as quickly as possible,” IDPH
spokesperson Melaney Arnold said.
“Last April, before the end of the school year, the state began
encouraging schools to sign up for SHIELD testing,” Arnold said.
“Unfortunately, many schools have waited until now to sign up –
approximately 38% signed up after Aug. 24, 2021.”
Calling the testing program a “disaster,” state Sen. Chapin Rose,
R-Mahomet, was critical of its rollout, especially with the governor’s
vaccine mandate for educators looming.
“And they just wait until it’s past the point of no return to start
figuring out the logistics,” Rose said. “You can’t scale up four- or
five-hundred school districts in two weeks. It’s impossible.”
A spokesperson for SHIELD Illinois said they’re ready for the increased
demand.
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“With 114 more public school districts and 45 more
non-public schools scheduled to launch testing in the next two
weeks, and an additional 84 public and 23 non-public in the three
weeks after that (through Oct. 29), we anticipate and are prepared
for a continued increase in testing volumes,” Taylor said.
Wirepoints President Ted Dabrowski said taxpayers are still footing
the bill and oversight is needed.
“You’ve got to wonder, is anybody enriching themselves, is there any
corruption, is there fraud?” Dabrowski said. “I’m hopeful this
government can figure it out, but I’m skeptical.”
Rose, who’s on the Legislative Audit Commission, wasn’t sure how
oversight would happen.
“I mean, yeah, there’s going to be oversight, but oversight of
what?” Rose said. “The goofballs that failed to anticipate what was
easily anticipatable?”
To date, SHIELD Illinois says it has performed more than 826,000
total tests across all organizations, with hundreds of agreements
with public and non-public schools.
“As a non-profit unit of the University of Illinois System, SHIELD
Illinois operates on a cost-recovery basis, only in pursuit of our
mandate as a land-grant institution to use our resources and
capabilities for the public good,” Taylor said. “As part of this
mission, we continue to look for ways to further reduce the per-test
cost to the state and extend even more testing to our fellow
citizens.”
A U of I-related company called SHIELD T3 contracts with
out-of-state organizations to provide the SHIELD testing services.
In response to questions about how many tests have been performed, a
spokesperson said the company “is focused on distributing the
innovative saliva-based test outside of Illinois,” and “has run
approximately 1.3 million tests to date.”
“We do not release revenue numbers,” said SHIELD T3 spokesperson
Melissa Harris.
There are different taxpayer-funded testing programs used by private
schools throughout the state, and other programs in the city of
Chicago and Cook County. |