Hundreds flock to COVID-19 testing site at Calypso waterpark - Action News
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Hundreds flock to COVID-19 testing site at Calypso waterpark

Hundreds of people lined up in their vehicles Fridayto get a COVID-19 test at a new drive-thrutesting centre in the parking lotof the Calypso waterpark near Limoges, Ont. including some frustrated bylong waits in the nation's capital.

Drive-thru site off Highway 417 meant to alleviate demand at other testing centres in region

Cars line up on the road leading to a new drive-thru COVID-19 testing site set up in the parking lot of the Calypso waterpark (Jean-Francois Poudrier/CBC)

Hundreds of people lined up in their vehicles Fridayto get a COVID-19 test at a new drive-thrutesting centre in the parking lotof the Calypso waterpark near Limoges, Ont. including some frustrated bylong waits in the nation's capital.

The site, opened one day earlier by the Eastern Ontario Health Unit (EOHU) in partnership with paramedics from the counties of Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry and Prescott and Russell, is meant to relieve pressure on other testing centres in the area, which have seen demand outstrip capacity afterschool resumed.

"We had an incredible lineup this morning and we've done close to 1,000 cars, which is what I had expected," said Dr. Paul Roumeliotis, medical officer of health for the EOHU.

"We know that there has been a big demand for testing."

The site is the seventh to open in the EOHUand is the latest development in an ongoing effort to expand testing in the region. It will be open daily from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. to anyone over the age of one who also meets new provincial testing guidelines.

The Ontario government announced Thursday it wouldshift back toward testing only symptomatic people and those in high-risk groups to relieve pressure on publicly funded testing sites and clear a severe backlog of samples. People without symptoms areable to get tested at select pharmacies as of Friday.

The testing site in the parking lot of the Calypso waterpark is operated by health workers from the Eastern Ontario Health Unit and paramedics from the surrounding counties of Stormont, Dundas and Glengarry and Prescott and Russell. (Jean-Francois Poudrier/CBC)

While currently billed as a temporary site, Roumeliotis said the tents and ambulances at Calypso will be replaced in the next few weeks with heated trailers as the site takes over the health unit's only existing drive-thru site in Casselman, Ont.

"We're now in the process of ordering special tents, special trailers, heaters and those type of things [so that] we're able to operate in the winter and cold months," said Roumeliotis.

Roumeliotis said the waterpark which didn't openfor the 2020 season because of provincial restrictions is ideal for a regional testing sitebecause of its location right off the 417 highway, the large capacity of its parking lot and the 3.5-km-long private road leading up to it means long lineups of vehicles won't be disruptive.

Ottawa residents takeadvantage

The Calypso testing site is proving popular with Ottawa residents, who have had to deal with long lineups and fast-filling online appointments atthe city's four main testing sites in recent weeks.

"It's impossible to get in anywhere [in Ottawa] so we came all the way over here," said Julia Climie, who drove approximately 45 minutes from Barrhavento get a test for her daughter.

Climie said stories of people lining up at Ottawa sites in the early hours of the morning show the desperate need for more testing sites there.

John Frechette, who also lives inBarrhaven, brought hisson to get tested because hewas experiencing three different symptoms of COVID-19.

Despite being in line for over two hours by the time he spoke toRadio-Canada, Frechette said he was comfortable waiting in his vehicle.

(CBC)

"It's more convenient to wait in your car than standing and having the kids ... I can entertain them in the car," said Frechette.

"You wouldthink the City of Ottawa would set up some more drive-thru centres considering there's a million people that live in that city."

Ottawa's only drive-thru testing centre is located in the parking lot of the Raymond Chabot Grant ThorntonPark on Coventry Road.

The city has promised to open up a new COVID-19 testing site at a community centre in Orlans in October, and another in the downtown core.

With files from Radio-Canada's Jean-Francois Poudrier

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