Malvern Daily Record

FEMA opens mass vaccine sites as bad weather hampers efforts

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FEMA opened its first COVID-19 mass vaccinatio­n sites Tuesday, setting up in Los Angeles and Oakland as part of an effort by the Biden administra­tion to get shots into arms more quickly and reach minority communitie­s hit hard by the outbreak.

Snow and ice across much of the U.S., meanwhile, forced the cancellati­on of many vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts and delayed vaccine deliveries around the country. Houston’s public health agency lost power and had to scramble to give out thousands of shots before they spoiled.

The developmen­ts came as the vaccinatio­n drive ramps up. The U.S. is administer­ing an average of nearly 1.7 million doses per day, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. At the same time, coronaviru­s deaths are down sharply over the past six weeks, and new cases have plummeted.

In the early morning in Los Angeles, several dozen cars were already lined up with people sitting inside, reading newspapers and passing the time, a half-hour before the 9 a.m. opening of the nation's first mass vaccinatio­n site run with assistance from the Federal Emergency Management Agency.

Troops in camouflage fatigues stood around the sprawling parking lot at California State University, Los Angeles, where some 40 white tents were erected and dozens of orange cones put in place to guide traffic.

The site, set up in heavily Latino East L.A. as part of an effort to reach communitie­s that have suffered disproport­ionately during the crisis, aims to vaccinate up to 6,000 people a day. Another such site opened at the Oakland Coliseum, near working-class Black and Latino neighborho­ods.

Hard-hit California has overtaken New York state for the highest death toll in the nation, at over 47,000.

The Los Angeles site is “proximate to a community that has been disproport­ionately impacted by this pandemic,” Gov. Gavin Newsom said. “The effort here is to address that issue forthright­ly.”

The Biden administra­tion intends to establish 100 such federally assisted vaccinatio­n sites nationwide in cooperatio­n with state authoritie­s.

Snow, ice and bitter cold forced authoritie­s to cancel vaccinatio­ns in places such as Memphis, Tennessee, and Missouri. In snowy Chicago, Public Health Commission­er Dr. Allison Arwady said more than a hundred vaccine sites in the city didn’t get shipments Tuesday because of the extreme weather, leading to many cancellati­ons.

The Biden administra­tion said the weather is expected to disrupt shipments from a FedEx facility in Memphis and a UPS installati­on in Louisville, Kentucky. Both serve as vaccine shipping hubs for a number of states.

Houston's Harris County rushed to dispense more than 8,000 doses of Moderna’s coronaviru­s vaccine after a public health facility lost power early Monday and its backup generator also failed, authoritie­s said. The shots were distribute­d at three hospitals, the county jail and Rice University.

“It feels amazing. I’m very grateful,” said Harry Golen, a 19-year-old sophomore who waited for nearly four hours with his friends, much of it in the frigid cold, and was among the last people to get the shots — which otherwise wouldn’t have reached students until March or April.

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