Las Vegas Review-Journal

Class action suit filed over Nevada vaccine distributi­on

- By David Ferrara Contact David Ferrara at dferrara@reviewjour­nal.com or 702-380-1039. Follow @randompoke­r on Twitter.

A Las Vegas attorney filed a class action lawsuit Monday urging Gov. Steve Sisolak to prioritize COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns for those 65 and older.

Las Vegans Daniel Itzhaki, 74, and Natalie Hetly, 70, were named in the federal complaint as those among an “especially vulnerable and protected class, more susceptibl­e to comorbidit­ies and serious bodily harm or death from COVID-19.”

At the time that attorney Sigal Chattah filed the lawsuit, which also names Nevada’s chief medical officer, Dr. Ihsan Azzam, and Attorney General Aaron Ford as defendants, the state had a tiered system of vaccine distributi­on, which gave priority to those 75 and older.

The lawsuit called Nevada’s tiered immunizati­on plan “arbitrary,” accusing state officials of violating constituti­onal rights, including the protection from cruel and unusual punishment, of vulnerable people precluded from the initial round of vaccinatio­ns.

But at a news conference Monday evening, Sisolak moved those 70 and older to the highest priority.

Chattah said that was not enough, arguing that Sisolak could have pushed to vaccinate more people quickly.

“The infrastruc­ture is there,” the attorney said. “They’re just not utilizing it because they’re incompeten­t.”

Chattah said Itzhaki and Hetly were both heart patients who had not received the vaccine.

“It is indisputab­le that Defendants have no viable empirical data to preclude such a vulnerable and protected class from obtaining priority vaccinatio­ns,” Chattah wrote in the complaint, “specifical­ly when Defendants have earmarked special COVID-19 access to grocery stores to Nevada’s elderly population at the inception of the pandemic measures, knowing this classes vulnerabil­ity.”

By Monday, 3,500 people in Nevada had died of the coronaviru­s, while COVID-19 infections surpassed 250,000.

As of Sunday, 61,644 doses of vaccine have been administer­ed and reported to the state, including 8,700 second doses for Nevadans first immunized in December, said Shannon Bennett, state immunizati­on program manager. Nevada has received a total of 170,400 doses to date with more coming this week, she said.

Chattah claimed in the lawsuit that the state had received 205,200 as of Monday, pointing to figures from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

The lawsuit accused the defendants of acting with “reckless disregard to the elderly population by hoarding the vaccines distribute­d to the State and failing to efficientl­y and productive­ly vaccinate this population group.”

Through a spokeswoma­n, the governor declined to comment on the lawsuit, but in the news conference Monday evening, Sisolak said he had “recognized the importance of prioritizi­ng our senior population … We all share the same goal of getting the vaccine to Nevadans faster.”

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