Several thousand rapid Covid-19 testing kits are to be distributed at more than a dozen sites around Broome County.

Patrick Dewing, director of the county Office of Emergency Services, said almost 7,000 test kits are to be given away.

A drive-through testing site will be set up at Otsiningo Park in the town of Dickinson Wednesday from 10 a.m. to 2 p.m.

Dewing said about 5,000 kits have been allocated for the Otsiningo drive-through event. There will be a limit of two boxes of tests - a total of four tests - per car. They'll be distributed on a first-come, first-serve basis.

For those not able to go to the park distribution event, test kits also will be available at the Broome County Office building in downtown Binghamton, as well as the following locations:

  • Broome West Senior Center
  • Northern Broome Senior Center
  • Eastern Broome Senior Center
  • Broome County Library
  • Deposit Free Library
  • Lisle Free Library
  • George F. Johnson Memorial Library
  • Nineveh Public Library
  • Fenton Free Library
  • Vestal Public Library
  • Your Home Public Library
  • Mary Wilcox Memorial Library

Kits will be available at the senior centers and libraries during regular operating hours while supplies last.

Positive test results can be reported through Broome County's website or by clicking HERE.

Covid-19 testing is available by appointment at the Broome County Health Department in Binghamton and at a state-run site at the former Davis College campus on Riverside Drive in Johnson City.

FLASHBACK: Vehicles lined up at the Otsiningo Park mask distribution point on April 24, 2020. (Photo: WNBF News)
FLASHBACK: Vehicles lined up at the Otsiningo Park mask distribution point on April 24, 2020. (Photo: WNBF News)
loading...
99.1 The Whale logo
Enter your number to get our free mobile app

Contact WNBF News reporter Bob Joseph: bob@wnbf.com.

For breaking news and updates on developing stories, follow @BinghamtonNow on Twitter.

LOOK: Food history from the year you were born

From product innovations to major recalls, Stacker researched what happened in food history every year since 1921, according to news and government sources.
 

LOOK: Here are the pets banned in each state

Because the regulation of exotic animals is left to states, some organizations, including The Humane Society of the United States, advocate for federal, standardized legislation that would ban owning large cats, bears, primates, and large poisonous snakes as pets.

Read on to see which pets are banned in your home state, as well as across the nation.

More From 99.1 The Whale