Nettie Cleo Blair Ayers, age 96, of Mt. Airy, passed away on Friday, November 17, 2023.
Funeral services will be held graveside at 12:30 PM, Monday, November 20, 2023, at Hazel Creek Baptist Church Cemetery, with Rev. Billy Burrell officiating.
The family will receive friends at the funeral home on Monday, prior to the service, from 11:00 AM until 12:00 PM.
Flowers will be accepted, or memorials may be made to the Hazel Creek Baptist Church Heating and Air Conditioning Fund, 243 Hazel Creek Road, Mt. Airy, GA 30563.
Shoppers check out the tables loaded with arts and crafts and merchandise at the Habersham County Senior Center Christmas Bazaar in Demorest. The two-day event ended Saturday afternoon, Nov. 18, 2023. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)
Local shoppers enjoyed pre-Thanksgiving shopping at the Habersham County Senior Center’s Christmas Bazaar. The two-day event, which wrapped up Saturday afternoon, featured arts and crafts and a variety of merchandise for sale.
On Saturday, Santa visited the Demorest Municipal Conference Center, where the event was held, so that people could snap selfies with him. Outside the Center, volunteers grilled hot dogs and hamburgers, selling lunch plates to hungry shoppers.
The Christmas Bazaar was a fundraiser for the Senior Center.
Santa stopped by for selfies (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)
Vendors had plenty of room to spread out and show their wares inside the newly-renovated historic elementary school. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)
Local artist Nick ‘Nack’ Morris and his wife, Amanda, were among the vendors selling their creative work at the Christmas Bazaar. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)
An under construction cap to a coal ash pond at Georgia Power’s Plant Yates on Sept. 7, 2023. Plant Yates is one of five sites where Georgia Power intends to cap ponds where coal ash sits partially submerged in groundwater. (Grant Blankenship/GPB News)
(GA Recorder) — Environmental advocates are calling on the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency to act after state regulators issued a final permit signing off on Georgia Power’s plans to leave coal ash partly submerged in groundwater at Floyd County’s Plant Hammond.
The permit is the first to be finalized under Georgia’s state-run coal ash disposal permitting program. More than 1 million tons of toxic coal ash sit at the site in an unlined pit near the Coosa River in northwest Georgia.
The decision can be appealed within 30 days.
The state’s decision came nearly two years after the Biden administration pushed back on the utility’s plans to dispose of massive amounts of coal ash using a close-in-place method at five locations where the ash is in contact with groundwater. Toxic ash is the waste left behind after decades of burning coal to generate electricity.
In January of last year, the federal agency announced it planned to enforce an Obama-era rule designed to limit the chances of coal ash toxins leaking into groundwater or waterways. The state EPD director at the time called it a “new interpretation” of the federal rule.
Jesse Demonbreun-Chapman, who is the executive director of the Coosa River Basin Initiative, said the Rome-based organization was “profoundly disappointed” by the state agency’s decision.
Georgia Power’s Plant Hammond coal-fired units shut down in July 2019 after generating electricity in the Rome region since 1954. (Coosa River Basin Initiative)
“We now look for EPA’s response,” Demonbreun-Chapman said. “A few miles downstream of Plant Hammond, the Coosa River crosses into Alabama, where EPA just rejected (the Alabama Department of Environmental Management’s) bid to manage coal ash pond closures specifically for approving these types of cap-in-place closures that threaten groundwater.”
The federal agency is in the process of denying the state of Alabama’s plan to allow Alabama Power to continue storing coal ash in unlined ponds, arguing the state left groundwater infiltration inadequately addressed.
In Georgia, the Plant Hammond permit has been closely watched because it is considered a bellwether for how the state may handle other – and larger – coal ash sites around the state, where some observers now expect draft permits to emerge soon. The state received nearly 2,000 public comments on the Plant Hammond permit.
Critics had also warned that the karst landscape at Plant Hammond, which was retired in 2019, also makes the site vulnerable to sinkholes.
State regulators countered many of the concerns in a written response issued this month. They argued that the regulations target water – like rainfall – that moves down into the soil, not groundwater that moves laterally. The cover installed over the pond, they reasoned, protects against such vertical threats.
And they said other safeguards are in place.
“The groundwater monitoring system and required reporting is designed to detect any migration of contaminants before there are offsite impact on human health or the environment,” the state agency wrote. “If contaminates are present above regulatory thresholds, corrective action will be taken. Corrective action may include a variety of remedies up to and including removal of the waste.”
In response to the public comments and what the state agency called the EPA’s “modified interpretation,” the state added a couple of conditions to the permit, including a requirement that the utility update the groundwater model to show elevations and the amount of ash in groundwater every five years.
A Georgia Power spokesperson defended the utility’s approach to storing coal ash at Plant Hammond. The utility is capping nine ash ponds where they are while excavating 20 ash ponds, including three others at Plant Hammond, and moving that waste to a lined landfill.
“Georgia Power continues to work in compliance with state and federal regulations to close its 29 ash ponds across the state,” Kelly Richardson said in a statement Friday. “At Plant Hammond, as we have at all our ash ponds across the state, we are utilizing proven engineering methods and technologies as part of customized, site-specific closure processes. This permit issuance is an important step as we continue our ash pond closure efforts at Plant Hammond.”
‘The gauntlet has essentially been thrown by Georgia EPD’
But clean water advocates are pressing federal officials to intervene. They argue the EPA should no longer allow Georgia to run its own permitting program overseeing the disposal of coal combustion residuals. Georgia is one of three states that have established their own permitting program.
“The ball is in EPA’s court to answer a very simple question: Does a CCR rule prohibit ash from groundwater for some states and not others?” said Chris Bowers, senior attorney with the Southern Environmental Law Center. “The language is the same. The science is the same. The contamination is the same.
“And so the gauntlet has essentially been thrown by Georgia EPD by this permit, and the big question is whether or not the EPA is going to allow states to basically ignore the standards by virtue of its permit program,” he added.
Bowers argued the state permit is “not worth the paper it’s printed on” because it does not comply with the federal rule against coal ash mixing with groundwater.
To Dori Jaffe, managing attorney at the Sierra Club’s Environmental Law Program, the Plant Hammond permit illustrates why the organization has always argued against Georgia running its own permitting program.
“This is kind of where we thought this was going to end up, but with EPA’s interim decisions, we thought, well, maybe there’s a chance EPD is going to do the right thing. Unfortunately, that is not the case,” Jaffe said.
Fletcher Sams, executive director of the Altamaha Riverkeeper, which is gearing up for the Plant Scherer permit, said the federal agency should have seen the state’s decision not to rescind the Plant Hammond permit as a sign that Georgia officials “were not planning to play along.”
“The big question on my mind is, is EPA going to enforce the law or are they going to let Georgia be the only state where they’re not enforcing the third highest environmental priority of this administration,” Sams said.
When asked how the EPA plans to respond, an agency spokeswoman, Angela Hackel, said Friday in a comment that the federal agency and state regulators are “engaged in productive dialogue on closure strategies.”
But she also noted that federal regulations bar these surface impoundments from being closed if coal ash continues to be saturated by groundwater.
“We will continue working with EPD to ensure that CCR permits address all applicable requirements and are consistent with the federally approved Georgia CCR Permit Program,” Hackel said. “We are committed to our partnership with Georgia and to pursuing our shared goals of protecting groundwater from contamination and ensuring robust protections for communities.”
Precision Digital will locate in the Airport Industrial Park in Baldwin. (Joy Purcell/NowHabersham.com)
The Baldwin City Council conducted a public hearing during their Monday, November 13 meeting to discuss the issuance of a special use permit (SUP) for Precision Digital. The permit, if approved, will pave the way for the construction of a data center in the industrial park.
Precision Digital intends to utilize the facility for high-performance computing, establish a data center, and operate a cryptocurrency mining venture. The necessity for a special use permit and variance arises from the city’s existing zoning ordinance, which lacks clarity regarding such specialized business activities. Additionally, Precision Digital seeks permission to operate with noise levels of up to 100 decibels, measured at the property line
During the public hearing, Tim Barbir, the owner of Precision Digital, advocated for the facility. Barbir underscored the significance of aligning the business with its surroundings, emphasizing his deliberate choice of Baldwin for this venture. He highlighted the advantage of power and fiber availability on the chosen property.
Mayor Stephanie Almagno commended Barbir for his proactive approach in specifying the decibel level. She pointed out that the city had assessed the noise impact and determined that the proposed facility would be less noisy than the airport adjacent to the property.
Addressing the zoning ordinance’s limitations, Mayor Almagno explained that Precision Digital’s request for a special use permit serves as a crucial safeguard. This measure ensures the business’s continuity, even as council members rotate off of the council in the future.
Council member Alice Venter acknowledged the collaborative efforts between the Development Authority, the county commission, and the city to facilitate Precision Digital’s entry into the city and the industrial park. A portion of the property had to be annexed into the city and the county waived its 30-day objection period to expedite the business’s progress.
The public hearing remained open for the mandated 20 minutes, providing an opportunity for community input. No one expressed opposition to Precision Digital’s special use permit.
The discussions during the public hearing mark a progressive stride in Baldwin’s support for innovative businesses, underscoring the city’s dedication to adjusting its ordinances to suit the needs of advancing industries. The forthcoming decision on the special use permit for Precision Digital is poised to significantly influence the broader economic landscape of the city.
The approval of a zoning ordinance for Precision Digital is anticipated at a later date, marking the next crucial step in the company’s integration into Baldwin.
A single-vehicle crash Friday claimed the life of an Elbert County woman. State troopers say Tracey E. Routh, 53, was fatally injured when the SUV she was riding in crashed into a tree.
The wreck happened just before 10 p.m. on Lake Forest Circle in Elberton. According to the Georgia State Patrol, Routh was a passenger in a Chevy Equinox driven by 33-year-old Shanteeka C. Browner of Elbert County.
The Equinox was traveling north on Lake Forest Circle when it left the west shoulder of the roadway and ran head-on into a tree.
EMS transported Browner to Piedmont Athens Regional with non-life-threatening injuries. Routh was transported to Elbert Memorial Hospital, where she was pronounced dead.
Troopers from Georgia State Patrol Post 52 in Hartwell, with assistance from the Specialized Collision Reconstruction Team (SCRT), are investigating the crash.
The Christmas Concert at First Baptist Cornelia has become a holiday tradition in Cornelia. The concert combines the FBC Sanctuary Choir with a community orchestra for a celebration of the season. (Photo by FBC Cornelia)
Enjoy the sounds of the season at a community Christmas concert at 5 p.m. on Sunday, December 3, at First Baptist Church Cornelia.
“Song of the Angels” is the theme of this year’s concert, according to First Baptist Minister of Worship & Music Randy LeBlanc.
“As I gathered the music for this year, I noticed how often ‘angels’ appeared throughout the songs, thus the concert title Song of the Angels,” says LeBlanc. “I am excited to feature the orchestra in a delightful original composition, ‘Angels Dance’ by Steve Amundson, recently retired orchestra director of St. Olaf’s College.”
This will be LeBlanc’s sixth Christmas concert with the choir and orchestra.
As with past concerts, he says this year there will be plenty of Christmas Carol favorites, including an audience carol sing-along accompanied by the professional chamber orchestra assembled by Heather Strachan, Artist in Residence at Piedmont University.
The event is free, but donations to the First Baptist Church’s Music Ministry are welcome. The church is located at 325 Oak Street in Cornelia.
Clarkesville Main Street is abuzz with excitement as it readies for the much-anticipated Christmas on the Square event and the traditional Habersham County Christmas parade. The festivities are scheduled to take place on Saturday, December 2, with Christmas on the Square kicking off at 3:00 p.m. and continuing until 8:00 p.m. The parade will commence at 6:00 p.m., starting from the new courthouse on Llewellyn Street and concluding at the old courthouse on Monroe Street.
Clarkesville Main Street Director Colby Moore shared details about the event’s itinerary. The festivities will begin at 3:00 p.m., featuring Santa Claus at the gazebo for professional photographs courtesy of CLS Films. Participants will have the opportunity to capture the holiday spirit with free photos with Santa.
The gazebo on the Clarkesville Square is decorated for the Christmas season in preparation for Christmas on the Square on December 2. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)
This year, Christmas on the Square introduces a delightful addition with vendors and food trucks adding to the festive atmosphere. Attendees can enjoy live music performances by LeAnne Challenger, Shady Grove Baptist Church, and Mat Fried throughout the event.
A highlight of the celebration is the third annual Cookie Crawl. Moore noted its immense popularity, emphasizing that participants should purchase their $5 cookie boxes early at the Clarkesville Main Street tent on the square. Each family is limited to two boxes, noting the 300 available boxes sold out in just 35 minutes last year.
The Christmas Tree lighting near the gazebo is scheduled for 5:50 p.m., marking the beginning of the parade at 6:00 p.m. This year’s parade theme, “Through the Ages,” aligns with Clarkesville’s bicentennial celebration. Moore encourages everyone there is still time to participate. “You can still sign up. We would like to have as many floats, as many people as we can get.”
Christmas decorations can be found around the square in Clarkesville. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)
To honor the bicentennial, the parade will feature three grand marshals: reenactors from the History Thru the Hemlocks portraying famous citizens in Clarkesville’s history—Jarvis Van Buren, Cornelius Stanford, and Susan Kollock.
Santa will make a special appearance at the end of the parade and return to the gazebo for families to take pictures.
Parking details were also provided by Moore. He wanted everyone to know that there will be no shuttle service this year. However, public parking is available near and around the square, including spaces at the Clarkesville police department, behind the Mauldin House, the old courthouse, and a public parking lot across from the Copper Pot. Parking on the square itself will not be available.
Moore emphasized that it’s not too late to join as a vendor (click here) or parade participant (click here). Interested parties can find forms on the City of Clarkesville’s Facebook page or email Moore at [email protected]. All vendor and parade participant fees are waived for this year’s special event.
Nearly eight decades ago, Allied soldiers stormed the beaches of Normandy and marked the beginning of the end of World War II. Veteran Andy Negra was one of the men in the momentous battle.
On Thursday night, Nov. 16, FOX Nation honored Negra with its “Salute to Service Patriot Award.” The ceremony was held at the Grand Ole Opry in Nashville, Tennessee.
Award-winning actor Dennis Quaid and FOX News’ Johnny “Joey” Jones presented Negra with the custom-crafted trophy.
“I represent all of the World War II veterans that are still alive, and for the other veterans out of the other wars, let me assure you, I represent you, too. That’s the Iraq and all the rest of them,” Negra said upon receiving his award.
Award-winning actor and newly named FOX Nation host Dennis Quaid presented the award to Negra, along with Staff Sergeant Johnny Joey Jones, a FOX News contributor. (Image courtesy FOX Nation)
From high school to Normandy
The 99-year-old veteran from White County recalled how, two weeks after high school, he was heading to Fort Bragg, North Carolina.
“I learned real quick what service to the country meant. I learned new jobs I never knew work. I learned how to rely on my friends. I relied on everything around me to protect me,” he said.
Negra commemorated the 79th anniversary of D-Day this past June at the beaches in Normandy, along with more than 40 other veterans. He told AP at the time that he was the last living member of the 128th Armored Field Artillery.
“[The world is] a mess. I never thought that we fought so hard during World War II to find the country in a condition that it is today, but let me assure you, let me assure all of you — every time this country ever got into a problem, they solved it, so regardless of what’s going on now, we will break this badness and get back to the good,” he said.
FOX Nation is the subscriber streaming service companion to FOX News Channel. The service launched the Patriot Awards five years ago to honor everyday American heroes, including military veterans, first responders, and inspirational figures contributing to their communities.
Demorest city council will be rededicating the Brent Lee Moore Memorial Ballfield on Saturday November 18 memorializing scouts Brent Lee Moore and Travis Roseman. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)
A Rededication Ceremony will be held by the city of Demorest on Saturday, November 18th, at 10:30 a.m. The Demorest City Council will rededicate the Brent Lee Moore Memorial Ballfield and memorialize Brent Lee Moore and Travis Roseman.
The monument commemorating Brent Lee Moore is already in the park. A plaque will be added to commemorate Travis Roseman and his 1985 Eagle Scout community project, a rock water fountain.
Travis Roseman built this water fountain for his Eagle Scout community project in 1985. (Source: City of Demorest Facebook page)
This year marks 30 years since Demorest Cub Scout Brent Lee Moore tragically lost his life in a boating accident on Lake Burton in the summer of 1993. It also marks 20 years since Eagle Scout Travis Roseman lost his life in a tragic automobile accident in 2003.
Demorest Council member Shawn Allen has led the charge for the rededication ceremony. He remembers the Eagle Scout project that Roseman tirelessly worked on for several months at the park named after Brent Lee Moore. Roseman enlisted the help of several adults and Boy Scouts to assist in the construction of the water fountain.
Over the 38 years since the water fountain was built, it had fallen into disrepair and was vandalized. This past summer, the city repaired the water fountain. During those repairs, a new water line had to be installed to make the fountain functional again, which required part of the fountain to be disassembled.
Unknown to anyone of its existence, the rock water fountain was actually a time capsule.
While repairing the fountain, crews found the cover of a Boy Scout Handbook inside it. (Jerry Neace/NowHabersham.com)
To their surprise, the city crews discovered the remains of a Boy Scout Handbook, apparently placed inside the fountain by Roseman. After 38 years, all that remained of the handbook was part of the cover.
Allen has sent out invitations to former Demorest Boy Scout Troop 660 members to join in the rededication. The city has invited both families to attend the ceremony.
The ceremony will take place at Brent Lee Moore Memorial Ballfield. The ballfield is located behind 250 Alabama Street (old Demorest Elementary School) at the intersection of Hazel Avenue and Florida Avenue in Demorest.
FILE - The former first lady Rosalynn Carter speaks to the press at conference at The Carter Center on Tuesday, Nov. 5, 2019, in Atlanta. On Thursday, Aug. 18, 2022, Carter, the second-oldest U.S. first lady ever, turns 95. (AP Photo/Ron Harris, File)
Rosalynn Carter has begun receiving at-home hospice care, a statement from the Carter Center said Friday.
The former first lady, 96, who was diagnosed with dementia in May, has been living in Plains, Ga., with former President Jimmy Carter, 99, who began receiving at-home hospice care in February.
The message, posted on X and the Carter Center’s website, said:
“On behalf of Jason Carter, grandson of President and Mrs. Carter: Former First Lady Rosalynn Carter has entered hospice care at home. She and President Carter are spending time with each other and their family. The Carter family continues to ask for privacy and remains grateful for the outpouring of love and support.”
The Carters have been married for more than 77 years, through his rise from their Georgia farm to his election to the presidency in 1976. After his 1980 defeat, the couple established The Carter Center in Atlanta as a global center to advocate human rights, democracy and public health.
“The best thing I ever had happen in my life was when she said she’d marry me,” Jimmy Carter said, long after leaving the Oval Office.
The couple’s grandson, Jason Carter, described his grandmother in a recent interview as the former president’s “partner No. 1, 2 and 3,” and the former first couple themselves both agreed that she has been the more aggressive political personality of their long pairing.
In Washington, the political press of the late 1970s dubbed Rosalynn Carter “the Steel Magnolia,” reflecting the quiet grace stereotypical of the era’s Southern political wives and a tough core that made her a force on her husband’s behalf and in her own right.
“She knew what she wanted to accomplish,” said Kathy Cade, a White House adviser to Rosalynn Carter.
Expanding the role of first lady, she worked in her own office in the East Wing, with her own staff, on her own initiatives. She also huddled with the president’s advisers and sat in on top-level meetings, raising eyebrows in Washington power circles.
“She didn’t say anything in Cabinet meetings, but she wanted to be fully informed so she could give her husband good advice,” said Carter biographer Jonathan Alter.
Alter considers Rosalynn Carter’s only peers as influential first ladies to be Eleanor Roosevelt and Hillary Clinton, although he said the Carters’ partnership was more seamless, because it lacked the infidelity and personal drama of the Roosevelts and Clintons.
The bond also involved friendly rivalry and humor: “I never knew I’d be married to somebody that old,” he wisecracked when Rosalynn was 91.
They often raced to finish writing their next books or best the other in tennis, skiing or any other pursuit.
Rosalynn was at the center of Carter’s political campaigns, starting with his first state Senate race in 1962.
“In the beginning, I wrote letters to people. He would go out and then I would write letters to them,” she told The Associated Press. “But then it developed into a full-time job for me, working to help him get elected.”
She first campaigned solo during his 1966 bid for governor. She was initially nervous but warmed to the role and ultimately demonstrated what White House adviser Stuart Eizenstat called “uncanny political instincts.”
In the White House, it was Rosalynn who urged her husband to think more about the 1980 election as he set priorities, and talk through how decisions might play in the media.
When Jimmy Carter stayed in Washington to work every angle to free the American hostages in Iran, the first lady hit his reelection campaign trail.
“I had the best time,” she told the AP. “I campaigned solid every day the last time we ran.”
Rosalynn Carter’s signature policy issue — improving treatment and removing societal stigma about mental health — traced back to her husband’s Georgia campaigns.
Voters “would stand patiently” waiting to tell of their family struggles, she once wrote. After hearing one overnight mill worker’s story of caring for her afflicted child, Rosalynn decided to take the issue to the candidate. She showed up at her husband’s rally that day unannounced and stood in line to shake his hand like everyone else.
“I want to know what you are going to do about mental health when you are governor,” she asked him. She recounted his reply: “We’re going to have the best mental health system in the country, and I’m going to put you in charge of it.”
This article appears on Now Habersham in partnership with GPB News
The Davis House, previously known as the Dickey House, went up in flames early on the morning of Tuesday, Nov. 14, 2023. (Photo credit: Dekalb County Professional Firefighters)
Officials have determined the cause of the fire that destroyed the largest historic home at Stone Mountain State Park.
Park officials said Thursday the state fire marshal determined the blaze was started by a short in an electrical conduit.
The Davis House, previously known as the Dickey House, went up in flames early Tuesday morning, Nov. 14. The DeKalb Fire Rescue Department received a call around 3:20 a.m. for a structure fire at 1060 John B. Gordon Drive. When firefighters arrived, they found heavy flames coming through the roof.
The DeKalb Fire captain says the house was under renovation and it appeared the house was a total loss. Arson investigators were brought in to investigate if the fire was deliberately set.
“After an in-depth fire scene examination, our investigators determined the cause to be a short circuit in the residence’s electrical wiring. As a result, this fire has been classified as accidental in nature,” says Georgia Insurance and Safety Fire Commissioner John King.
The Davis House, formerly the Dickey House, was transplanted to Stone Mountain Park from Dickey, Georgia, in 1961. (State Fire Investigations Unit photo)
King says the fire originated in the men’s parlor room closest to the front entrance. Baseboards in the corner were modified to fit electrical wiring for the room. Following the short circuit, the wiring heated up until nearby combustible materials ignited.
The historic house came from a former plantation near Albany. It was built in the 1840s on a 1,000-acre plantation in Dickey, Georgia. In 1961, crews cut up the house and moved it 200 miles to Stone Mountain, where carpenters put it back together. The house was relocated to the park when the mountain and its carvings of Confederate leaders became a tourist attraction.
Barrow COVID testing kiosk (Northeast Health District photo)
ATHENS, Ga. – The Northeast Health District is now offering COVID and influenza PCR testing at kiosks at five locations throughout the district. These kiosks offer access to testing 24 hours a day, 7 days a week.
After completing a brief registration form, the kiosks dispense two test kits – one kit is for COVID testing and the other is for influenza (types A and B). The test kits include a nasal swab and instructions on collecting the specimens. Nasal swabs must be done for each test. Once the specimens are collected, they are safely packaged back into the kits and placed in the kiosk. The specimens are picked up daily and sent to an accredited lab for PCR testing.
Individuals will receive notification of their test results by email or text, usually within 48 hours of specimen collection.
These kiosks are located in Athens, Danielsville, Greensboro, Jefferson and Winder:
The Athens kiosk is located at 3500 Atlanta Highway, Athens, GA 30606 (old fire station – entry for parking area is off Mitchell Bridge Road).
The Danielsville kiosk is located at 91 Albany Avenue, Danielsville, GA 30633 (parking area near gazebo).
The Greensboro kiosk is located at 1031 Apalachee Avenue, Greensboro, GA 30642 (Greene County Health Department).
The Jefferson kiosk is located at 59 Bill Mahaffey Lane, Jefferson, GA 30549 (Jackson County Tag/Tax Office).
The Winder kiosk is located at 15 Porter Street E, Winder, GA 30680 (Barrow County Health Department, side entrance on Woodlawn Avenue).
Pre-registration for testing at the kiosks is not required but is available at https://register.testandgo.com/. There is no out-of-pocket cost for the tests provided through a DPH kiosk, but for individuals with insurance, their insurance will be billed.
Public health officials say COVID and influenza testing is among the many prevention measures that protect you and others by reducing the chances of spreading illness.
Other preventive measures include:
Frequent and thorough handwashing with soap and warm water. Alcohol-based gels are the next best thing if you don’t have access to soap and water.
Cough or sneeze into the crook of your elbow or arm to help prevent the spread of germs.
Avoid touching your face as germs can get into the body through mucus membranes of the nose, mouth, and eyes.