Miami Herald (Sunday)

Black community leaders organize to ensure access to COVID vaccines

- BY CHRISTINE SEXTON News Service of Florida

TALLAHASSE­E

A coalition of Black community leaders said Wednesday they will work to ensure that upward of 70% of the state’s minority population gets vaccinated against the virus that causes COVID-19.

“My friends, this is a sense of urgency. We feel that these vaccines are a gift of life. We know unfortunat­ely, and sadly, that people of color are dying disproport­ionately,” R.B. Holmes, the pastor of Tallahasse­e’s Bethel Missionary Baptist Church, said during a meeting of the Florida Statewide COVID-19 Vaccine Community Engagement Task Force. “Many of us, all of us, have buried, ministered and comforted thousands of people who have died from the virus. This is one battle that we cannot sit out.”

Holmes spearheade­d the creation of the task force, which includes representa­tives from historical­ly Black colleges and universiti­es as well as Black business leaders, Black media representa­tives and Black politician­s. The group wants to develop a vaccinatio­n strategy aimed at medically under-served communitie­s that have been disproport­ionately and adversely affected by the COVID-19 pandemic.

Holmes said the task force will work in conjunctio­n — and not at odds — with Gov. Ron DeSantis and his administra­tion.

“We gotta go from the spirit of criticism to the spirit of cooperatio­n. The bottom line is, too many people are dying from this virus. The bottom line is, we have to be the voices that saves our people,” Holmes said. “We understand the Tuskegee experiment. We understand the medical community — how bad it has been back in the day. We get this. But in this day, too many people are dying across this country, across this state from the coronaviru­s. That’s the crisis. That’s the crisis.”

The task force’s meeting came as the number of COVID-19 cases in the state continues to spike and as Florida struggles to distribute doses of Pfizer and Moderna vaccines that already have been delivered to the state.

DeSantis traversed the state Wednesday making appearance­s in Pensacola and Miami Gardens touting new locations where people age 65 and older can obtain the COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns.

According to a federal website, 1.152 million doses of the vaccines have been distribute­d to the state as of Jan. 5. But just 25% of the doses have been distribute­d to those who qualify for the vaccinatio­ns, according a Jan. 4 report by the Florida Department of Health.

The report shows that, of the 287,776 people vaccinated thus far, slightly more than 5% are Black. More than 57% of those who received vaccinatio­ns are white, and more than 19% of the shots were given to people who identified as “other.”

Meanwhile, Florida health officials have logged more than 1.4 million cases of COVID-19 in the state since the pandemic began. As of Wednesday, the Florida Department of Health reported that 22,317 Florida residents have died of COVID-19.

The state’s vaccinatio­n efforts have been hampered by long lines, jammed phone systems and overwhelme­d websites as Florida seniors scrambled to get inoculatio­ns from county health department­s and hospitals.

DeSantis issued an executive order Dec. 23 that made people age 65 and older and health-care providers who have direct contact with patients eligible for the vaccinatio­ns. There are 4.4 million people age 65 and older in Florida.

DeSantis has downplayed the distributi­on chaos but at the same time has worked to bolster the state’s current vaccinatio­n efforts, which rely largely on hospitals. County health department­s, part of the state Department of Health hierarchy, also have been enlisted in the state plan.

The governor appeared in Pensacola Wednesday to tout the efforts of Ascension Sacred Heart Hospital and its goal to distribute 3,500 doses of the Moderna vaccine to people 65 and older by Thursday. The hospital is working with Olive Baptist Church in Pensacola and the Milton Community Center to meet the goal.

“You’re going to see this all over the state,” the governor said. “You’re going to see a lot of shots going into arms.”

Later Wednesday, DeSantis held a press conference at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens, which will be converted from solely a drive-through COVID-19 testing site to also serve as a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n site. DeSantis said the state will start slowly offering 1,000 vaccines per day, to avoid confusion and long lines.

The governor on Tuesday announced an agreement with Publix supermarke­ts that will bring 15,000 vaccinatio­ns to 22 stores in three Florida counties.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States