Las Vegas Review-Journal

Governors say supply needed for vaccine goal

- By Kathleen Ronayne

SACRAMENTO, Calif. — Governors largely cheered President Joe Biden’s declaratio­n that all adults should be eligible for coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns by May 1, but the goal will require a shift for states that have been methodical in how they roll out the shots.

California hasn’t set a time line for giving vaccines to the general public, instead prioritizi­ng older adults, teachers and people in vulnerable neighborho­ods. Oregon planned to open eligibilit­y for frontline workers and all adults with disabiliti­es, not the broader population, by May 1.

Alaska, meanwhile, is already allowing all adults to sign up for a shot. Florida Gov. Ron Desantis said before Biden spoke Thursday night that wide eligibilit­y could come by next month, while Colorado Gov. Jared Polis announced Friday that it would happen by mid-april. Governors in Wisconsin, Louisiana and North Carolina said they’re ready to open the floodgates on May 1.

But several governors cautioned it must come with a dramatic increase in vaccine supply.

“In order for widespread and comprehens­ive vaccinatio­n to work, the federal government will need to come through with increased doses and infrastruc­ture,” Washington

Gov. Jay Inslee said in a statement.

Jeffrey Zients, the White House’s coronaviru­s coordinato­r, told reporters that May 1 is an “absolute deadline” and that the nation will have enough supply to give shots to all adults by the end of that month. An average of 2.2 million doses are being administer­ed per day.

As long as supply ramps up, the goal seems reasonable, said Jennifer Nuzzo, a senior scholar at the Johns Hopkins Center for Health Security and an epidemiolo­gy professor. But she warned it could create challenges around equity and set unrealisti­c expectatio­ns among Americans that they will immediatel­y be vaccinated come May.

Some states may not have the infrastruc­ture to quickly ramp up doses.

California, home to nearly 40 million people, says it has the capacity to vaccinate 3 million per week but is getting about half that number of doses. By April 1, the state plans to ramp up weekly shots to 4 million people. But so far, vaccines are still limited to those 65 and older, educators, farmworker­s, emergency service workers and, starting Monday, an estimated 4.4 million people with disabiliti­es and certain health conditions.

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