Los Angeles Times

Pasadena vaccine clinic is shut down

The site cancels appointmen­ts after its system is f looded with ineligible sign-ups.

- By Laura J. Nelson

Pasadena officials on Tuesday canceled a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n clinic for senior citizens, grocery store employees and other essential workers after hundreds of people who were not eligible for the shots signed up for appointmen­ts.

People who did not yet qualify for the vaccine under state guidelines claimed about 900 of the 1,500 slots at a clinic that was designed for people older than 65 and essential workers who live or work in Pasadena, city spokeswoma­n Lisa Derderian said.

Many of the appointmen­ts were booked by people who worked in the media and in Hollywood, Derderian said, including at production companies, streaming TV services and news outlets and on the sets of soap operas.

“Hundreds signed up within the first hour,” Derderian said. “It was like rapid fire.”

The Pasadena Public Health Department last week sent an email to healthcare workers, senior citizens, child-care workers, teachers and food workers who had expressed interest

in getting the vaccine, telling them they could book appointmen­ts at a clinic at Pasadena City College.

The email told workers they would be required to present proof that they worked in an eligible industry and lived or worked in Pasadena. The email also included a registrati­on link to California’s vaccinatio­n appointmen­t system, CalVax, and provided slots for five days, including Thursday.

On Monday, a Los Angeles Times reporter who had received a link to sign up for an appointmen­t called the city, Derderian said. Officials opened the registrati­on system and saw that hundreds of people with jobs in Hollywood and the media had claimed available slots, she said.

The registrati­on link for Thursday’s vaccinatio­n clinic had spread quickly. A warning in red letters, telling users not to forward the links, had failed to keep the links private.

The CalVax website does not allow health department­s or vaccine clinics to limit registrati­ons to people who live or work in certain ZIP Codes. That means people who are not eligible for vaccines, or not eligible at a particular site, can still fill out the registrati­on forms and secure an appointmen­t.

Some patients said they thought they were eligible because the page included a drop-down menu that asked users to select their industry, including “Service — entertainm­ent, performanc­e.” A warning message in dark red letters, directly above the form, read: “Vaccine supply is limited. Before registerin­g, please check to see if you are eligible to sign up.”

California has limited vaccine access to people 65 and older, as well as essential workers in food and agricultur­e, education and child care, healthcare and emergency services. No other essential workers are currently eligible.

The Pasadena health department tries to improve its screening process by calling every person who lists an address outside the city on the registrati­on form,

Derderian said. Many are restaurant workers and grocery store employees who are eligible for shots and commute to the city for work, she said. Officials remind them to bring a pay stub, a letter from their employer or another form of documentat­ion that shows they work within the city boundaries.

Calling 900 people within a few days to verify their eligibilit­y or ask them not to come was just too much, Derderian said. The city decided to reschedule the clinic. No new date has been confirmed.

“We would have hundreds of people showing up who would not have qualified, and they would have been turned away,” Derderian said. “I’m sure the situation would have escalated in many cases.”

She added: “We do check for ID. We will turn you away if you don’t meet the current tier, if you don’t live in town or work in town. Our health officer will not risk her credential­s or the health department’s licensing or the city’s reputation.”

Canceling the clinic was particular­ly difficult news for senior citizens who had struggled to get appointmen­ts, and who have been largely shut off from the world for a year, Derderian said. Some cried when they learned their appointmen­ts had been moved, she said.

Local officials have complained that the state’s technology for making and managing vaccine appointmen­ts is flawed, and does not allow them to easily reserve vaccine appointmen­ts for people in communitie­s where infection rates are high and vaccinatio­n rates are low.

The problems in Pasadena mirrored a situation in Los Angeles County in which registrati­on codes meant to reserve vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts for residents of communitie­s hit hard by COVID-19 wound up in the hands of more privileged Angelenos, including privatesch­ool teachers and Hollywood workers, as The Times previously reported.

Health department­s have traditiona­lly used CalVax to schedule flu vaccine clinics, and some — including Pasadena and Long Beach — are using the software to schedule COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns too.

Other agencies, including Los Angeles County, have transition­ed to a new state-run website called My Turn, which is specifical­ly designed for the pandemic. The software has its own limitation­s and has been hammered by complaints of glitches and compatibil­ity problems.

Times staff writer Melody Gutierrez contribute­d to this report.

‘We would have hundreds of people showing up who would not have qualified, and they would have been turned away.’ — Lisa Derderian, Pasadena spokeswoma­n

 ?? Francine Orr Los Angeles Times ?? MONSERAT RAMOS watches as her grandparen­ts are vaccinated at a clinic in South Los Angeles open to people who reside in its service area. Enforcing eligibilit­y requiremen­ts in the county has been an issue.
Francine Orr Los Angeles Times MONSERAT RAMOS watches as her grandparen­ts are vaccinated at a clinic in South Los Angeles open to people who reside in its service area. Enforcing eligibilit­y requiremen­ts in the county has been an issue.

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