King County’s North Seattle isolation and quarantine site on April 8. The North Seattle/Aurora facility is located at 1132 N 128th St. in Seattle. It features six modular units with a total capacity of 23 people. Corey Morris/staff photo

King County’s North Seattle isolation and quarantine site on April 8. The North Seattle/Aurora facility is located at 1132 N 128th St. in Seattle. It features six modular units with a total capacity of 23 people. Corey Morris/staff photo

King County facilities readying for COVID-19 peak

Facilities are located throughout the county to assist patients with varying levels of support.

  • By Sound Publishing staff
  • Wednesday, April 8, 2020 12:14pm
  • News

As of April 8, 39 people in King County are staying at county isolation and quarantine sites.

King County currently has three isolation and quarantine sites (IQRs) up and running. The facilities are not yet at capacity.

The county isn’t reporting overall numbers at the sites, nor is it collecting data on individuals and patient statuses or why they are there, county spokesperson Angie Malpass said in an email update.

“Qualifications are based on Public Health’s triage assessment,” Malpass said. “Not all are homeless and they include first responders and individuals with a vulnerable family member at home in need of a safe place to isolate or quarantine.”

IQRs

IQRs offer temporary lodging for people who cannot safely self-isolate or quarantine in their own home, or those who do not have a home, Malpass explained. Sites will provide health and basic behavioral health care, food and other basic needs. Public Health will approve referral to isolation and quarantine, and approve discharge.

Quarantine is for people without symptoms who may have been exposed.

Isolation is for people who are ill and able to spread the disease.

The three active IQRs in King County are Building A in Kent, 49 rooms in Issaquah, and Aurora in Seattle.

Building A is a set of hotel rooms at Kent Central Avenue Motel (1233 Central Ave. N). Initially, it was 15 rooms but now has a total capacity of 79 people. Malpass said the county first renovated the Kent hotel rooms in Building A to meet Public Health’s standards for isolation and quarantine (ripping out carpet and putting in hardwood floors, for example), and then moved to renovate the rooms in Building B. Renovations in Building B are nearly complete and it could open this week. Building C will start renovations this week, putting it some two weeks from opening.

The North Seattle/Aurora facility is located at 1132 N. 128th St. in Seattle. It features six modular units with a total capacity of 23 people.

The Issaquah Hotel is located at 1801 12th Ave. NW. Eventually the site will have a total capacity for 99 people. Currently, the facility is only renovated to provide 49 beds. The remaining rooms are being renovated to Public Health standards.

Two additional IQRs will open soon at White Center and Harborview in Seattle.

White Center/Top Hat is located at 206 SW 112th St. in Seattle. It will feature eight modular units with a total capacity of 31 people. Construction is complete, all eight units are built, and rooms are being readied and stocked with supplies, Malpass said.

“We will activate it when there is demand — probably when the current open sites are closer to 75% full,” Malpass explained. “We are seeing more utilization, so we will see what the coming week brings, and then we will make decisions about both White Center and Shoreline.”

Harborview Hall is operated by Harborview Medical Center and located at 326 Ninth Ave. in Seattle. It will have the potential to house 45 people and is expected to open this week. The facility will receive people with high-intensity, behavioral health needs.

RCs

Assessment centers and recovery centers (RCs) provide Public Health-supervised care to symptomatic or COVID-positive adults who can’t follow public health guidance for isolation, quarantine or recovery in their own home, or those who are homeless, Malpass explained.

“(RCs) can provide flex space for hospitals to discharge non-emergency COVID cases, freeing hospital beds for more acute patients,” she said.

In addition to providing testing for high-risk populations, Malpass noted, each facility will provide separate isolation spaces for people awaiting test results and for those who test positive. The facilities will provide food, shelter and basic care.

Currently, the county has identified four RC sites — one in Bellevue, one in Shoreline and two in Seattle.

The Bellevue facility is located in Eastgate at 13620 SE Eastgate Way, and it will have a capacity for 140-150 people. The RC will house patients in two fabric structures (tents).

“The Eastgate tents are set up and it is close to being ready to activate,” Malpass said. “Over the weekend, supplies were delivered, unloaded and set up by AmeriCorps volunteers.”

The facility, when it’s ready, will not immediately fill to capacity.

“Eastgate is meant to be a surge capacity when you suddenly have a cluster of people who need a place… less of a one person at a time location like the IQRs,” Malpass said. “The (RCs) can take a group of people all at once if a surge happens. Surges are hard to predict, but we are ready for when/if they happen.”


Talk to us

Please share your story tips by emailing editor@kentreporter.com.

To share your opinion for publication, submit a letter through our website https://www.kentreporter.com/submit-letter/. Include your name, address and daytime phone number. (We’ll only publish your name and hometown.) Please keep letters to 300 words or less.

More in News

t
Asylum seekers, supporters ask Kent City Council for housing help

They want Econo Lodge on Central Avenue reopened; Kent, King County have no plans to do so

King County SWAT vehicle. Courtesy photo
Investigation concludes on SWAT team’s fatal shooting of suspect in Algona

A multi-agency team has finished investigating the King County SWAT’s shooting of… Continue reading

A screenshot of the King County Sheriff’s Office Guardian One helicopter view of the arrest of a Kent man after carjacking incidents Feb. 13 in Kent. COURTESY IMAGE, King County Sheriff’s Office
Kent Police to join new Western Washington Carjacking Task Force

U.S. Department of Justice announces Seattle, Kent police departments as partners to reduce crime

Kent Police Chief Rafael Padilla and his command staff will host a community meeting from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday, May 9 at Highline College. COURTESY PHOTO, Kent Police
Kent Police set community meeting for May 9 at Highline College

Topics to include latest news, updates from Police Chief Rafael Padilla and his command staff

t
Sound Transit constructing giant bridge in Kent for light rail

Structure along I-5 stretches more than three football fields in length

t
Medical examiner identifies Kent man killed while lying in street

Tony Vento Houston, 63, died of multiple blunt force injuries after vehicle hit him

t
Kent historian, master gardener Nancy Simpson dies at age 80

Roles included Greater Kent Historical Society president; King County Landmarks commissioner

t
Kent man dies after collision with vehicle while lying in the street

Incident at about 4:06 a.m. Tuesday, April 16 at 132nd Avenue SE and SE 278th Street

t
Kent Police to offer teen academy for students in June

For high school students interested in law enforcement career

Madeline Goldsmith. COURTESY PHOTO
No suspect yet in July 2023 Kent murder of Madeline Goldsmith

Someone fatally shot 18-year-old Kentwood High graduate as she sat in vehicle near Lake Meridian

t
Police bust mother, daughter in Kent for retail crime spree

Two reportedly joined one other woman in 3-state crime ring taking women’s clothing from Lululemon

t
Reith Road in Kent to get two new roundabouts this year

City Council approves $4.28 million bid; project to start in late May or early June