Daily Press (Sunday)

Vaccinatio­n migration

Unable to get appointmen­ts here at home, some Virginians have made the trek from Hampton Roads to N.C. to get their shot

- By Alissa Skelton Staff Writer

ELIZABETH CITY, N.C. — Anxious for the coronaviru­s vaccine, a pipeline of Hampton Roads residents crossed the border into North Carolina to get shots after being unable to do so in Virginia.

Word spread quickly over the past few weeks that Hampton Roads residents were getting inoculated — no questions asked — on a first-come, first-served basis at vaccinatio­n clinics in rural North Carolina towns.

As more Virginians began flooding the clinics, North Carolina health department officials got more restrictiv­e, announcing that only excess vaccines would be given to Virginians after all local residents had been served.

By Friday evening, it got even tighter. The health

department covering those regions said it’s receiving fewer vaccines next week and will only serve historical­ly marginaliz­ed and underserve­d communitie­s.

Michael Payment, chairman of the Currituck County Board of Commission­ers, said it has been tough to handle the swarms of Virginians over the past couple of weeks and hopes the crowds will die down so the local government­s can focus on vaccinatin­g local residents.

“We are going to have to start prioritizi­ng North Carolinian­s because we don’t have the doses anymore,” Payment said.

On Monday and Tuesday, Virginia Beach friends Cookie Rightmeyer, 78, and Denise Koh, 61, waited outside clinics for several hours. Neither had been able to secure a vaccine appointmen­t in Virginia, so they decided to try North Carolina.

On Tuesday, they parked in a lot at Elizabeth City Regional Airport. John Baiocco of Chesapeake was in the car next to them, hoping to get a vaccine for his 83-year-old mother, June, who lives in an independen­t living facility in Chesapeake. He has registered her for the vaccine in Virginia, but she has not yet received an appointmen­t.

“It’s a life or death situation,” John Baiocco said. “An hour drive is nothing.”

This week, those running the clinic had given occupants of both cars vaccinatio­n forms and told them to return an hour before the clinic closed to find out if any vaccines were left.

They sat in their cars until 2:45 p.m., when they hurried across the street to line up alongside dozens of Virginians hoping to receive a vaccine. As they neared a gated entrance, a law enforcemen­t officer told them no shots were left. Rightmeyer said a Virginia-plated car in front of them was the last to be waived in.

Had they decided to go to another location about 22 miles away in Hertford on Tuesday, they may have gotten the vaccine.

“Another unsuccessf­ul day,” Koh said as she and Rightmeyer drove away.

Koh rolled down her window and told the Baioccos, who were behind them in line, that they were turned away. Soon, the Baioccos exited the line and left the facility disappoint­ed, too.

Rightmeyer concluded they had missed their window for easy access to the vaccine in North Carolina. The week prior, she said she knew of six Virginia residents who received the vaccine at North Carolina clinics without waiting in a parking lot until the end of the day.

Tipped off by a friend, Richard Doummar, a 61-year-old attorney, was one of the first from Virginia Beach to receive a vaccine in North Carolina.

He said he received the vaccine around lunchtime on Jan. 21 in Maple. He filled out a vaccinatio­n form, requesting his personal informatio­n and address. He didn’t have to wait until the end of the day. Within a minute of pulling into the parking lot, he said he rolled down his window and was given the shot in his arm.

He said he didn’t see anyone with Virginia plates in cars next to him, but he told several friends about it. Since then, he said he has heard from at least 15 who have been vaccinated in North Carolina, too.

He said he was motivated to try to get a shot in North Carolina because he wants to feel safe with his 101-year-old mother, who also has received her first shot.

“They had plenty of doses and they wanted to make sure they gave them out,” Doummar said. “If a state nearby has extra doses, why would they not share it? Why throw them away?”

Amy Underhill, a spokespers­on for Albemarle Regional Health Services, the health department that oversees the clinics, did not respond to questions about why Virginians were given vaccines regardless of age or prioritiza­tion category.

She also would not address why her agency had excess vaccines — or how many Virginians and North Carolinian­s had been vaccinated at ARHS clinics.

What Underhill would say is that local residents are being prioritize­d first.

“Our vaccines are designated for NC residents,” Underhill wrote in an email. “While we cannot refuse service, we will only serve residents from other states, including Virginia after all of the NC residents have been served, and only if we have vaccines available at that time.”

Underhill, however, said ARHS will administer second doses to Virginians who have already received a first dose in North Carolina. This was welcome news to Virginia Beach Mayor Bobby Dyer and Vice Mayor Jim Wood, who feared Beach residents might not be able to receive a second shot in North Carolina. Dyer said he was prepared to ask Virginia Gov. Ralph Northam to help those residents get second doses if North Carolina did not agree to provide them.

North Carolina’s Health and Human Services Department’s website said the CDC instructed states not to refuse non-residents since the vaccine supply is coming from a federal resource.

But Sarah Lewis, a spokespers­on for the department, said those vaccinated are expected to meet the current eligibilit­y requiremen­ts, which include healthcare workers and individual­s 65 or older. Lewis said she was not aware if ARHS’s distributi­on practices ventured outside those guidelines, and she did not respond to further questions via email.

When asked if Northam was aware that Virginians have been vaccinated in North Carolina, Alena Yarmosky, a spokespers­on for the governor, said she could not address it. But she pointed to a New York Times report that said Virginia had administer­ed at least one shot to 9.1% of its population compared to 8.3% of people in North Carolina.

“Virginia has vaccinated a higher percentage of our population than North Carolina and has also administer­ed more of our distribute­d doses,” Alena Yarmosky, a spokespers­on for Northam, wrote in an email on Friday.

Wood said he thinks Virginia Beach should be receiving more vaccines so he appreciate­s that neighborin­g North Carolina is helping.

“There’s a woefully inadequate supply of vaccine in Virginia,” Wood said. “Everybody needs to get the vaccine. I don’t fault anybody for going to North Carolina at all.”

The wait for vaccines continues

Rightmeyer, the 78-year-old woman from Virginia Beach, said she has been on the wait list to receive a vaccine at Virginia Beach’s Convention Center for two weeks. While many of her friends have received appointmen­ts, she has not.

“I just want to get the vaccine so I feel safer,” Rightmeyer said. “I barely go anywhere — just to the grocery store and to get prescripti­ons.”

Rightmeyer said she has spent most of the last year at home alone. She hasn’t been able to spend much time with her two daughters and four grandchild­ren since the pandemic began. On Mother’s Day last year, her daughter and two grandchild­ren, who live in North Carolina, came to visit with masks on for about an hour. That same daughter came to help Rightmeyer after she had surgery in October. But she hasn’t been able to see her other two grandchild­ren and daughter who live in Florida.

“This past Christmas was the first Christmas I have spent in my entire life without one member of my family,” Rightmeyer said.

John Baiocco, 58, said he, too, hasn’t been able to get his mother an appointmen­t even though she has a high risk of of developing a serious case of COVID-19 if she caught it.

June Baiocco’s retirement community, Lighthouse Pointe in Chesapeake, has encouraged families to seek out the vaccine independen­tly while the center waits to hear if it can secure shots for residents on site, said David McGowan, the facility’s general manager. The facility is designated under Phase 1b of the vaccine rollout, he said.

“Every day, we are reaching out to state decision makers and local county health department­s, grocery store pharmacies and any other provider that we become aware of,” McGowan said in a letter to residents on Feb. 3.

John Baiocco said he knew he might not be able to get a shot for his mom in North Carolina, but he felt he had to try.

“I felt I wasn’t doing enough to secure the vaccine for my mother,” Baiocco said. “If she got the virus, it could be deadly for her.”

 ?? HANNAH RUHOFF/STAFF ?? Cookie Rightmeyer, 78, poses for a portrait at her home in Virginia Beach on Thursday. Rightmeyer has been waiting to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, even traveling to North Carolina to get one, to no avail.
HANNAH RUHOFF/STAFF Cookie Rightmeyer, 78, poses for a portrait at her home in Virginia Beach on Thursday. Rightmeyer has been waiting to receive a COVID-19 vaccine, even traveling to North Carolina to get one, to no avail.
 ?? HANNAH RUHOFF/ STAFF ?? Photos of Cookie Rightmeyer’s family line a table at her home in Virginia Beach. Rightmeyer has not seen most of her family in over a year because of the COVID-19 pandemic.
HANNAH RUHOFF/ STAFF Photos of Cookie Rightmeyer’s family line a table at her home in Virginia Beach. Rightmeyer has not seen most of her family in over a year because of the COVID-19 pandemic.

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