Mayor Bernard C. "Jack" Young on Thursday announced a public-private partnership to expand access to mobile coronavirus testing.

The city health department is partnering with Johns Hopkins Medicine, the University of Maryland Medical Center and BUILD.

“This partnership will help us increase testing availability for our residents across the city and reduce barriers we know our residents have experienced,” Young said. “I want to thank Health Commissioner Dr. Letitia Dzirasa and our partners at Johns Hopkins and UMMS (University of Maryland Medical System) for their efforts in setting up this partnership.”

Dzirasa said that the mobile testing will help them curb a positivity rate as high as 20% in some neighborhoods.

Johns Hopkins Medicine held its first testing event on June 25 at the Sacred Heart of Jesus Church in Highlandtown, an area chosen based on a city health department analysis of data trends.

“Johns Hopkins Medicine recognizes how important it is to meet our communities where they live to provide critical testing capabilities for areas that have been significantly impacted by COVID-19,” Dr. Sherita Golden, vice president and chief diversity officer at Johns Hopkins Medicine, said in a statement. “We’ve tested hundreds of people at our community testing events so far, and we are committed to continuing our future events in our joint efforts to stop the spread of this devastating illness.” Read more at WBAL