Wednesday Journal 011922

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W E D N E S D A Y

January 19, 2022 Vol. 42, No. 25 ONE DOLLAR

@wednesdayjournalinc

JOURNAL

@wednesdayjournal

@oakpark

of Oak Park and River Forest

Complaints put pop-up COVID testing sites under scrutiny

N bbaseball New b ll coach for OPRF Page 15

CUT OUT FOR FAME

Illinois Attorney General urges caution, investigations launched By STACEY SHERIDAN Staff Reporter

With the rise of COVID-19, so too came the rise of the free pop-up testing site. Offering free tests with a quick turnaround for results, the testing sites have become increasingly ubiquitous. And despite using names that would imply otherwise, the testing sites are often run by people with limited, if any, medical experience or training. Worse yet, local and state health departments have effectively zero authority over the sites to ensure the operations run efficiently. Although the sites consistently promise a quick turnaround of test results, some patients have waited weeks to receive theirs. Others are still waiting. “I still have never received the results and never received an explanation for why I haven’t received the results,” said Jane Sutphen of Oak Park, one of many people who shared a negative testing experience with Growing Community Media. Sutphen got tested Dec. 8 at a pop-up site in a strip mall storefront at 6325 W. North Ave. in Oak Park. When she went, the site was operating under the name of Northshore Clinical Labs, which Sutphen See TESTING SITES on page 12

ALEX ROGALS/Staff Photographer

Fans of the late Betty White gathered outside the Lake Theatre on Saturday morning, Jan. 15, to celebrate the entertainment icon who was born in Oak Park 100 years ago. See story and more photos, page 10.

Teachers on edge as COVID surges By F. AMANDA TUGADE Staff Reporter

Editor’s Note: Wednesday Journal agreed to change the names of the employees in the story to protect their identities. On a Thursday evening, Rebecca, Mary and Lisa sat alone in quiet rooms inside their homes. The second week of the second semester was about to end, but the three veteran school teachers felt

like they had already endured so much. The days felt longer like they were stitched together to create one endless loop only to break when new problems and concerns occurred. Earlier this month, after a two-week winter break, the three – who requested their names be withheld from the story to protect their identities – returned for in-person learning, joining dozens of staff and students. They walked into their

classrooms, as another surge in COVID-19 cases took hold of communities near and far on top of new calls for a shorter quarantine and isolation period by public health officials. Rebecca, Mary and Lisa, all of whom work in the same local school district, braced themselves for the uncertainty. “I had no idea how bad it was going to be until that Monday [Jan. 3, the first day See COVID on page 13

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