Family asks questions after Chicago postal worker dies from coronavirus at 31

CHICAGO – Family claims the first letter carrier to die of coronavirus was discharged from the hospital after testing positive and giving birth.

The National Association of Letter Carriers honored Unique Clay, 31, Saturday after she became the first active letter carrier in Chicago to die of coronavirus.

“All I need is answers, why would they send my baby home to die with her kids?” her mother Annette Clay said.

The mother of three died less than a week after giving birth to a daughter. On Tuesday, her 11-year-old daughter found her dead at home.

Clay’s family said University of Chicago Medicine discharged her three days after she tested positive for the virus, despite having asthma. Read more at WGN

One Response to "Family asks questions after Chicago postal worker dies from coronavirus at 31"

  1. Family working in Chicago District says that there isn’t a single office in the city taking this as seriously as media claims. Masks and gloves are optional and a simple ‘i have a medical condition’ is enough for them to not have to cover up. You have a hundred people per office on average all coughing, sneezing farting on each other and then delivering this stuff door to door. They cannot be bothered to wear gloves out on delivery either because gloves make it hard to text non stop while delivering the mail.

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