Los Angeles Times (Sunday)

From shelter to vaccinatio­n point

With homeless people moving, San Diego Convention Center’s next role could be inoculatio­n site.

- By Gary Warth

SAN DIEGO — More than 700 people at a temporary homeless shelter in the San Diego Convention Center will begin moving into smaller shelters the week of March 22, but the waterfront venue isn’t expected to host any events in the foreseeabl­e future.

Instead, the Convention Center soon could become a mass vaccinatio­n site, San Diego County Board of Supervisor­s Chairman Nathan Fletcher said Friday during a news conference outside the complex.

Under preliminar­y plans, Fletcher said, the spacious building on Harbor Drive near downtown’s waterfront could be a drive-through vaccinatio­n site or possibly the county’s next super site, which could administer 5,000 shots a day.

Convention Center Chief Executive Rip Rippetoe said he was still awaiting state guidance on when operations could resume at the venue. No events are booked through the first half of the year.

For the past 11 months, the Convention Center has been the site of the city’s 1,300-bed Operation Shelter to Home. The city opened the shelter April 1 last year out of concerns that the coronaviru­s could spread in the more-compact bridge shelters that were operating in two large tents and at Golden Hall in downtown San Diego.

The Convention Center shelter was largely successful at controllin­g the virus over most of its operation, although a surge of infections occurred at the venue in December, coinciding with a countywide surge that month.

Overall, 256 clients and 40 volunteers or staff members tested positive for the coronaviru­s at the Convention Center shelter.

City and county officials on Friday said Operation Shelter to Home was successful on other fronts.

Mayor Todd Gloria said it served more than 4,000 people and helped find permanent or longer-term housing for 1,300 individual­s and 43 families.

“Every San Diegan should take pride in what Operation Shelter to Home accomplish­ed in keeping our homeless neighbors safe, but also ending the cycle of homelessne­ss for hundreds during this pandemic,” Gloria said.

Tamera Kohler, CEO of the Regional Task Force on the Homeless, said the 11month operation also provided lessons in how to better connect homeless people with healthcare, and those lessons will be replicated moving forward.

Vaccinatio­ns for COVID-19 have been administer­ed to people at least 65 years old at the Convention Center, and the medical clinic at Father Joe’s Villages in downtown’s East Village has been administer­ing vaccines every other week.

Fletcher said the county expects to receive doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine next week. Unlike the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines that require two shots, the Johnson & Johnson vaccine requires only one.

Fletcher said homeless people will be among those given priority for the Johnson & Johnson vaccine because requiring a second shot could be challengin­g for people living on the street.

So far, there are no medical teams that are administer­ing vaccines to the unhoused, but Fletcher said the county may begin such a program.

Deacon Jim Vargas, president and CEO of Father Joe’s Village, said the nonprofit’s medical teams that already are doing street outreach could begin providing vaccines to people living without shelter.

Father Joe’s Villages is overseeing about 400 of the 737 homeless people at the Convention Center shelter this week, and Vargas said there is more than enough room at Golden Hall to accommodat­e them all.

The nonprofit had been operating a bridge shelter at Golden Hall before moving its clients to the Convention Center, and Vargas said it will be able to shelter more people there than it did last year because beds will be spread out over two floors.

The first floor will have 526 beds for men, and the second floor will have 46 beds for transition-aged youths 18-24 years old, 146 beds for families and 10 cribs for babies.

No single women will be in Golden Hall, but Father Joe’s can accommodat­e them at its Paul Mirabile Center, which has 40 beds for women and 135 for men, and its new 28-bed shelter for women, Vargas said.

The Alpha Project, which is overseeing clients in another section of the Convention Center shelter, will move 180 adults to its tented bridge shelter at 16th Street and Newton Avenue and 106 adults to its tented shelter on Imperial Avenue, according to a press release from the mayor’s office, which also stated that the numbers could change.

Some people from the Convention Center also will move to an interim shelter at Connection­s Housing, which is operated in downtown San Diego by People Assisting the Homeless.

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