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Man drives supplies from Ann Arbor to Lakota tribes in South Dakota during pandemic
Read full article: Man drives supplies from Ann Arbor to Lakota tribes in South Dakota during pandemicANN ARBOR โ Kevin Leeser has been active in organizing donations of PPE since the onset of the coronavirus pandemic, and now that includes cleaning supplies. Leeser, who launched Operation Face Shield Ann Arbor, recently donated 500 face shields to the Lakota people in South Dakota who have experienced high case numbers. After they asked for cleaning supplies for their quarantined members, Leeser decided to rally the local community to donate supplies, which he is delivering himself this week. Read: Ann Arborโs Operation Face Shield surpasses 50K donationsFor those who wish to donate funds, tax deductible donations can still be made to โOperation Face Shieldโ via CashApp. Local businesses Jerusalem Garden and Stadium Hardware donated supplies over the weekend.
Ann Arbor District Library joins community effort to print face shields for frontline workers
Read full article: Ann Arbor District Library joins community effort to print face shields for frontline workersANN ARBOR โ The Ann Arbor District Library announced this week that it has joined forces with Operation Face Shield Ann Arbor to print protective gear for those on the frontlines of the COVID-19 pandemic. Operation Face Shield Ann Arbor is a public Facebook group that was launched less than two weeks ago. The three hole punch model that Operation Face Shield Ann Arbor is printing was modified by an engineering student at Skyline High School. A permanent drive-up donation site has been established in the parking lot of Ann Arbor Distilling Company. Ann Arbor Distilling Company is at 220 Felch St.For more information, join the Facebook group or visit its website.
Ann Arbor residents join effort to print medical gear at home
Read full article: Ann Arbor residents join effort to print medical gear at homeANN ARBOR โ Operation Face Shield Ann Arbor was started by local resident and registered nurse Kevin Leeser. He launched the Facebook group in an effort to rally residents with 3D printers to print face shields as local hospitals face shortages of essential personal protective equipment during the COVID-19 outbreak. It takes three hours to print the base for one face shield. "They donโt cover your nose and theyโre disposable.โThe homemade face shields can be cleaned and reused. Join the Operation Face Shield Ann Arbor Facebook group.