Community
COVID-Testing Firm Raided by Feds, Second Company Also Under Investigation
The Center for COVID Control, which has more than 100 testing sites around the country, including in Bay Area cities such as San Jose, San Ramon, and Mountain View, is facing scrutiny for its handling of testing; failing to follow health and safety protocol at some sites; significant delays for delivering results or delivering no results at all; intentionally giving patients false results, and destroying patients’ test kits before they could even be tested.

- By Brandon Ptterson
- The headquarters of a major national COVID-19 testing chain was raided by federal investigators over the weekend after coming under growing scrutiny for its handling of COVID testing and other health protocol failures.
The chain, the Center for COVID Control, which has more than 100 testing sites around the country, including in Bay Area cities such as San Jose, San Ramon, and Mountain View, is facing scrutiny for its handling of testing; failing to follow health and safety protocol at some sites; significant delays for delivering results or delivering no results at all; intentionally giving patients false results, and destroying patients’ test kits before they could even be tested.
In a statement on its website, the company said all of its testing sites are closed until further notice.
The Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services, the federal agency that oversees the company’s testing lab, found “non-compliance” and “deficiencies” at the lab, according to Block Club Chi, a local news outlet in Chicago, where the company is based.
Block Club Chicago broke the story. A review of the company in December cited the company for mistakes that rendered tens of thousands of tests untestable.
According to Block Club Chicago, people at Center for COVID Control testing sites have reported a range of issues including dirty sites, long lines and crowded waiting rooms, workers without masks or gloves, and workers trying to charge people for tests that should be free.
According to former employees who worked at the Center’s go-to lab, trash bags full of untested test kits lay around the lab unrefrigerated for days, which can damage the tests and make them unusable.
Other former employees said that when test results were delayed — often for several weeks — they were instructed to lie about results when people called to inquire. The husband of the company’s CEO has posted on social media about buying luxury cars with “COVID money” from the testing franchise.
“CCC remains committed to providing the highest level of customer service and diagnostic quality and will not resume collection of patient samples until staffing resources permit CCC to operate at full capacity,” the Center said in a statement on its website. “CCC will provide an update on reopening plans when appropriate.”
Meanwhile, a second national COVID testing company, O’Hare Clinic Lab, also came under scrutiny this week for similar issues.
The Chicago-based company, which has more than 100 locations across the country and has received more than $186 million in funding from the federal government, according to Block Club Chicago, is under investigation by the Illinois Department of Health and the Illinois Attorney General’s office.
Many O’Hare patients told Block Club Chicago that they never got results or received them weeks late and that they couldn’t reach the company when trying to get answers.
O’Hare said in a statement that “the Omicron surge provided enormous unforeseen challenges” for the company but that the company was working to “provide our customers with the quick and reliable results they expect and deserve.”
This story was written using reporting from Block Club Chicago and NBC News Bay Area.
Bay Area
Registration Opens for Richmond’s 1st Annual Citywide Garage Sale
Richmond residents are encouraged to register for the first annual Citywide Garage Sale, which is scheduled for Saturday, May 13, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., according to the Richmond City Manager’s weekly newsletter. The event will follow in the model of the El Cerrito Citywide Garage Sale, which encourages residents to reuse and recycle locally while reducing clutter.

The Richmond Standard
Richmond residents are encouraged to register for the first annual Citywide Garage Sale, which is scheduled for Saturday, May 13, from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m., according to the Richmond City Manager’s weekly newsletter.
The event will follow in the model of the El Cerrito Citywide Garage Sale, which encourages residents to reuse and recycle locally while reducing clutter.
How it works: residents register their households to host a garage sale for a $10 nonrefundable registration fee. The city’s Recreation Division uses that information to create a map of registered households that will be published online at least one week ahead of the event. Shoppers will be able to access the map to find garage sale locations and descriptions.
To register as a host of a garage sale, you can do so in person by downloading the Citywide Garage Sale Registration Form and bringing it to the Recreation Complex at 3230 Macdonald Avenue. You can also register online on the city’s ActiveNet platform.
The deadline to register is April 14.
For more information, visit https://www.ci.richmond.ca.us/4476/Citywide-Garage-Sale to register or call (510) 620-6793.
BayCityNews
State Attorney General Issues Consumer Alert for Storm Price Gouging
In response to Gov. Gavin Newsom’s declaration of a state of emergency, California Attorney General Rob Bonta warned consumers that price gouging during the state’s series of storms is illegal. On Wednesday, Bonta issued a consumer alert reminding residents that it is against the law for sellers to increase prices by over 10%. The law applies to sellers with food, emergency or medical supplies, building materials and gasoline for sale.

By Bay City News
In response to Gov. Gavin Newsom’s declaration of a state of emergency, California Attorney General Rob Bonta warned consumers that price gouging during the state’s series of storms is illegal.
On Wednesday, Bonta issued a consumer alert reminding residents that it is against the law for sellers to increase prices by over 10%. The law applies to sellers with food, emergency or medical supplies, building materials and gasoline for sale.
Also prohibited are extreme price spikes for reconstruction services, cleanup services, transportation services and rental housing and hotel accommodations.
Sellers are exempt from the prohibition if the price of labor, goods or materials have increased.
Violators are subject to fines up to $10,000 or a one-year county jail sentence, and civil penalities.
Californians who believe they were a victim of price gouging are urged to report the incident to local authorities or to Bonta’s office at oag.ca.gov/report.
Copyright © 2023 Bay City News, Inc. All rights reserved. Republication, rebroadcast or redistribution without the express written consent of Bay City News, Inc. is prohibited. Bay City News is a 24/7 news service covering the greater Bay Area.
Bay Area
Bay Area Saw Wind Gusts of Up to 88 Mph As Tuesday’s Storm Whipped Through Region
High winds throughout the Bay Area on Tuesday blew down multiple trees and knocked out power, causing cancellations and delays on public transit, the closures of some highways and roads, and safety hazards as arcing power lines hit land.

By Bay City News
High winds throughout the Bay Area on Tuesday blew down multiple trees and knocked out power, causing cancellations and delays on public transit, the closures of some highways and roads, and safety hazards as arcing power lines hit land.
Point Potrero in Richmond logged the highest Bay Area winds at 88 mph, according to the National Weather Service as of 8:08 p.m.
Los Gatos saw winds at 82 mph, Oakland International Airport and Mount Diablo logged winds at 74 mph in the East Bay, Napa saw gusts at 65 mph, San Francisco International Airport reached gusts of 64 mph, and the Monterey, Palo Alto and Watsonville airports all saw winds at up to 59 mph.
“It’s been a little windy, to say the very least!” quipped the National Weather Service on Twitter.
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