Miami Herald (Sunday)

Hospital and county contradict DeSantis’ claims about role in Ocean Reef vaccines

■ Officials from Baptist Health and Monroe County contradict Gov. Ron DeSantis’ contention that the state had no role in authorizin­g vaccine distributi­on in a wealthy Keys enclave.

- BY MARY ELLEN KLAS AND DAVID GOODHUE meklas@miamiheral­d.com dgoodhue@flkeysnews.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

After Gov. Ron DeSantis claimed “the state was not involved” in arranging for more than 1,200 Keys residents in the wealthy Ocean Reef community to get accelerate­d access to the COVID-19 vaccine in January, both Baptist Health South Florida — which supplied the doses — and Monroe County have contradict­ed his claims, saying the distributi­on was authorized by the state.

“It is our understand­ing that the Medical Center at Ocean Reef asked the State of Florida for vaccine doses, and the State

of Florida asked Baptist Health to take delivery of the doses to our ultra-cold freezer storage for delivery to the Medical Center at Ocean Reef,” Dori A. Alvarez, spokespers­on for Baptist Health Systems, said in a statement to the Herald/ Times late Friday.

According to a Jan. 22 newsletter sent to residents of the exclusive Ocean Reef Club and obtained by the Miami Herald, the Medical Center at Ocean Reef reported: “Over the course of the last two weeks, the Medical Center has vaccinated over 1,200 homeowners who qualify under the

State of Florida’s Governor’s current Order for those individual­s who are 65 years of age or older. We are fortunate to have received enough vaccines to ensure both the first and second for those vaccinated.”

The message also acknowledg­ed that doses were in short supply: “At this time, however, the majority of the State has not received an allocation of first doses of vaccines for this week and beyond, and the timing of any subsequent deliveries remains unclear.”

The governor has come under increasing criticism for establishi­ng himself as the gatekeeper of vaccine distributi­on in Florida, as he directed doses to select communitie­s while his political committee raised more than $3.9 million from donors, some of whom are affiliated with the vaccine locations.

At a news conference on March 4, DeSantis chose his words carefully. He denied that the Ocean

Reef was a “state site” but did not deny that he or the Florida Division of Emergency Management, which distribute­s vaccines, had a role in authorizin­g it to be one of the early sites. DeSantis and FDEM have refused to publicly release the criteria used to select the timing and locations of the vaccine distributi­on.

“That was not a state site,” DeSantis told reporters “It was not anything that the state set up. It was done through one of the hospital systems that had vaccine.”

He added, “my view is is, if you’re 65 and up, I’m not worried about your income bracket, I’m worried about your age bracket, because it’s the age, not the income that shows the risk.”

HOSPITAL CEO OWNS HOME THERE

But questions remain about how Ocean Reef was authorized to receive the early doses at a time when supply was scarce. Baptist Health System President and CEO Brian Keeley and his wife own a home in Ocean Reef that is valued at $1.7 million, according to Monroe County property records.

Alvarez, the Baptist Health spokespers­on, refused to comment on whether Keeley was instrument­al in getting a pilot program in early January for his Ocean Reef neighbors to get access to the doses. On Jan. 19, just three days prior to the Ocean Reef email to residents, Baptist Health was forced to cancel appointmen­ts for hundreds of members of the general public who had signed up to get a vaccinatio­n because it had run out of supply.

Alvarez also would not comment on whether the vaccine distributi­on to Ocean Reef contribute­d to the shortage experience­d by Baptist Health.

“As we have said, our mission is to get as many shots out as we can, as safely and as fast as we can, based on guidance from the State and vaccine availabili­ty,” she said.

The discrepanc­ies have prompted the state’s top Democratic officials to ask the FBI to investigat­e.

COUNTY CONTRADICT­S GOVERNOR

Monroe County Commission­er Mike Forster also confirmed that the state was in charge of the vaccine distributi­on to Ocean Reef.

“The where, when and how many vaccines that are shot in the arms of my constituen­ts are first decided at the state level to wherever they determine is highest and best use, and are also allocated to our Health Department, which is state run, and our Emergency Management,” he told the Miami Herald.

Foster said that the county was not asked to weigh in on the allocation and distributi­on of the vaccines, but many people were aware that Ocean Reef was among the first to be getting them.

“I, and I’m sure others, heard murmurs as to my constituen­ts in Ocean Reef getting vaccines,” he said. “But, I can tell you unequivoca­lly, that I never saw anything that was facilitate­d by anyone in the county.”

STATE PARSES WORDS

Asked to comment on the finger-pointing, a spokespers­on for the FDEM issued a statement Saturday that did not deny the state’s role but said the state “never directed” Baptist Health to open the site at Ocean Reef.

“To be clear, neither the Division of Emergency Management nor the Department of Health ever directed Baptist Health to open a POD [point of distributi­on] in Ocean Reef,” said Jason Mahon, spokespers­on for both DEM and the Florida Department of Health. “Any statement to the contrary is false.”

The governor has held events highlighti­ng select pop-up vaccine distributi­on sites in communitie­s linked to wealthy donors, but he has also held events in communitie­s in neighborho­ods serving primary Black and Hispanic residents, whose vaccinatio­n rate is much lower than the state average.

Last month, a high-end community that Republican fundraiser Pat Neal helped develop was chosen by DeSantis to host a pop-up vaccinatio­n clinic near Bradenton. Only people from two ZIP codes were eligible to receive the vaccine at the Lakewood Ranch site, and names were chosen by Manatee County Commission­er Vanessa Baugh, who included herself on her vaccine selection list.

Agricultur­e Commission­er Nikki Fried and Senate Democratic Leader Gary Farmer on Thursday urged the U.S. Department of Justice to look into whether the $3.9 million in contributi­ons made to the governor’s political committee since December were connected to favorable treatment for vaccine distributi­on.

“If this isn’t public corruption, I don’t know what is,” Fried said.

DeSantis and the Florida Department of Health released a draft vaccinatio­n distributi­on plan written in October, but the governor has since abandoned those recommenda­tions, which would have given priority to front-line healthcare workers over all residents ages 65 and older.

For two months, reporters have asked the DeSantis administra­tion to release the location and criteria used to distribute vaccines but it has refused, suggesting instead that the public trust its word.

The Florida Department of Health has released some documents to the Herald/Times Tallahasse­e bureau, but the records do not include complete details about whether and when vaccines were distribute­d. For example, they show that one-fourth of all vaccines went to Publix supermarke­ts. While the state did not know in advance where Publix was sending doses, it did learn afterward and adjusted allocation­s based on that.

Public health experts now say the governor isn’t moving fast enough to make more people eligible for the vaccine, and it has led to an unused supply.

RAISING MILLIONS

Meanwhile, disclosure reports for DeSantis’ political committee, Friends of Ron DeSantis, show that since December the governor has raised $3.9 million, including $2.7 million in February alone — when he was focusing on the pop-up vaccinatio­n sites. DeSantis is expected to seek re-election in 2022 but has not formally announced his candidacy.

One resident of Ocean Reef, Bruce Rauner, the former Republican governor of Illinois and former chairman of the Chicagobas­ed private equity firm GTCR, wrote a $250,000 check on Feb. 25, a week after his 65th birthday which then made him eligible for the vaccine in Florida, according to the Chicago Tribune.

At the March 4 news conference, DeSantis indirectly acknowledg­ed the connection. “Do you know, has he even been vaccinated?” he asked, referring to Rauner.

Miami Herald staff writer Daniel Chang contribute­d to this report.

 ?? Photo courtesy of Ocean Reef ?? A look at the Ocean Reef Club's sprawling pool complex and marina.
Photo courtesy of Ocean Reef A look at the Ocean Reef Club's sprawling pool complex and marina.

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