Los Angeles Times

Vaccine rollout begins at LAFD station

Department plans to inoculate staff within two weeks; most say they want the shot.

- By Faith E. Pinho

Firetrucks and paramedic parapherna­lia were cleared out and vials and needles rolled in Monday as a downtown Los Angeles fire station transforme­d into a vaccinatio­n site for the city’s f irefighter­s to receive their f irst doses of the Moderna COVID- 19 vaccine.

The Los Angeles Fire Department employees — the city’s first to receive the vaccine — joined f irst responders across Southern California in getting the shot.

“These are the folks who are always there for us,” Mayor Eric Garcetti said. “Not just during COVID, but when any disaster strikes — whether it’s a f ire, whether it’s a medical emergency — we know that these men and women are the folks that are literally angels in our city of angels.”

Shipments of the Moderna vaccine arrived for the L. A. Fire Department last week, agency spokesman Peter Sanders said. About 150 paramedics were trained Monday morning on how to administer the vaccines, earning shots in the arm in the process. In the afternoon, they began giving the vaccine to their colleagues as Garcetti, Fire Chief Ralph Terrazas and other officials watched.

“We do see the vaccine as a light at the end of a very long tunnel,” Terrazas said. He noted that the Fire Department has seen 650 positive cases among its ranks since the beginning of the pandemic. Roughly a dozen have been hospitaliz­ed and one f irefighter- paramedic, Jose Perez, died of COVID- 19 complicati­ons in July. Even now, 157 remain in quarantine or isolation, Sanders said.

The Moderna vaccine has been shown to be 94.5% effective at preventing cases of COVID- 19. News of its arrival

for first responders came as L. A. County showed an increasing­ly dire picture of the pandemic: 7,181 coronaviru­s- positive patients hospitaliz­ed, with 1,449 in intensive care, according to the latest state data. Many hospitals are already overrun with patients, and the numbers are expected to worsen when infections from Christmas gatherings begin to show.

“It may not feel like it on a rainy day like this, but this is a ray of sunshine,” Garcetti said, as rain poured outside the fire station garage.

Behind the mayor, the vaccinatio­n process hummed along. One person registered the f irefighter­s’ names while another drew the vaccine from a vial and another stuck it into the firef ighter’s arm. In the coming weeks, f irefighter­s will receive email and text updates to remind them to get the second dose.

The garage has already been functionin­g as a oncea- week COVID- 19 testing site for city employees, Sanders said. Now it will double as a vaccine site for the Fire Department’s approximat­ely 3,400 f irst responders, along with two other stations in Watts and North Hollywood.

The department expects to vaccinate every employee who wants to receive it in the next two weeks. In a recent informal survey, nearly 90% of respondent­s said they wanted the vaccine, Sanders said.

Firefighte­r- paramedic Mark Flynn said he was “5050” a few weeks ago about whether he would get the vaccine, but after researchin­g it and speaking to medical doctor relatives who had received the vaccinatio­n, he decided to line up.

“The benefits outweigh the risks for me,” Flynn said. “I think the biggest thing is educate yourself. Do some personal research on it.”

After receiving the vaccinatio­n, he said he was “happy about it.” Now he plans to share his experience with family and friends.

“I’m kind of the guinea pig, so to speak, for them,” he said. “Maybe I can encourage them to get it as well.”

Terrazas said he plans to receive his f irst shot Wednesday, alongside the presidents of the f irefighter and chief unions. They will videotape their experience and send it to all employees to encourage them to get the vaccinatio­n as well, he said.

“I didn’t want to cut in front of anybody. It’s a longstandi­ng tradition in our Fire Department — like for meals, the officers go last,” Terrazas said. “But I also want to encourage people, and the best way to encourage them is for me to get the shot.”

Similar scenes have unfolded at fire stations across Southern California in recent days. The Los Angeles County Fire Department began rolling out vaccines on Christmas Eve, said Capt. Ron Haralson. As of Sunday, 1,793 of the department’s approximat­ely 4,000 members had been given the Moderna vaccine, he said. The department expects to offer it to everyone who wants it within the next few days, Haralson said.

Orange County Fire Authority employees began receiving the Moderna vaccine over the weekend, as did emergency medical technician­s, f irefighter­s and paramedics in Corona.

 ?? Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times ?? VICTOR Aguirre, left, an L. A. Fire Department captain, talks with Chief Ralph Terrazas and Mayor Eric Garcetti on Monday, as f iref ighters are vaccinated.
Gary Coronado Los Angeles Times VICTOR Aguirre, left, an L. A. Fire Department captain, talks with Chief Ralph Terrazas and Mayor Eric Garcetti on Monday, as f iref ighters are vaccinated.

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