Miami Herald

Hard Rock Stadium opens for COVID-19 vaccines, but more confusion follows

- BY SAMANTHA J. GROSS, ANA CLAUDIA CHACIN AND MARY ELLEN KLAS sgross@miamiheral­d.com achacin@miamiheral­d.com meklas@miamiheral­d.com Samantha J. Gross: @samanthajg­ross

As the demand for shots of the COVID-19 vaccine swells in South Florida, the state is moving to convert churches and testing sites into vaccinatio­n locations to expand access for those 65 and older. Seniors, though, continue to struggle for access to the vaccines during a bumpy rollout.

Gov. Ron DeSantis held a news conference at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens on Wednesday to announce that the stadium testing site would become a new location for vaccines. But even before DeSantis spoke, first responders and people 65 and over were getting the shots there.

Local fire chiefs had identified people and invited them to the vaccinatio­n site, according to Valeria Pete, a public affairs officer for the Florida National Guard, in what DeSantis termed a “soft opening” for the Hard Rock site that is expected to last several days.

There was no public portal available for seniors to register for vaccinatio­ns at the Hard Rock on Wednesday. More first responders and seniors will be invited to receive the vaccine there on Thursday.

On Wednesday, participan­ts drove into the twolane vaccinatio­n tent to receive the shot, then were instructed to pull off to the side and wait for 15 minutes for monitoring of any symptoms, as advised by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Eventually the site will ramp up to administer­ing 1,000 vaccines a day, DeSantis said. But for now, the site is invite-only.

“We don’t want to sign people up and not be able to deliver vaccines,” he said.

Because the testing site is now shared with the vaccine lanes, capacity for testing will be decreased. DeSantis said the site may become vaccine-only eventually. The tests could be deployed elsewhere, he said.

“If you’re 65-plus or a front-line healthcare worker and you don’t have symptoms, you’re better off getting the vaccine anyway,” he said.

The stadium will be the first state-run COVID-19 testing location in MiamiDade to convert into a site where seniors and front-line healthcare workers can get vaccinated. Marlins Park in Miami — a state-run testing location — is also in the process of being converted into a vaccinatio­n site, according to Miami Mayor Francis Suarez.

Broward County’s Holiday Park, another state-run testing site, is set to close its testing completely and open as a vaccinatio­n site Thursday.

DeSantis’ office confirmed to the Miami Herald on Tuesday evening that the Miami-Dade site will be the first of several state-supported testing sites that will become vaccinatio­n locations in the near future.

“Miami Hard Rock is the first site for this new initiative as the governor and his administra­tion continue with proactive efforts to ensure the vaccine is administer­ed as quickly as possible,” DeSantis spokeswoma­n Meredith Beatrice said in a statement.

Jackson Health CEO Carlos Migoya said at a news conference Tuesday that he expected the Hard Rock to be the first of three drive-up sites in Miami-Dade County, capable of vaccinatin­g 10,000 people every week, for a total of 30,000 doses administer­ed every seven days.

“We’re working to get two other sites done in the next week to 10 days,” Migoya said

Seniors and their families continued to battle confusing directions to get the vaccine, weeks into the rollout. One Boca Raton man, Joe McManus, said he got a call from the Broward County Health Department Tuesday saying his wife’s appointmen­t to receive the COVID-19 vaccine at Vista View Park in Davie was now in a new location.

But his daughter, Catherine, told the Herald that her 89-year-old father doesn’t remember where his wife Barbara, who is 92, is supposed to go.

The department tweeted Wednesday that people who received a “text message or voicemail” should go to the new location on the new date, at the original appointmen­t time. But Catherine, who made the appointmen­t for her mother, said they didn’t receive a text, only a call, and she now doesn’t know where to go to get her mother vaccinated.

Her father was vaccinated at Jackson Memorial Hospital in Miami on Wednesday.

Hundreds of others looking to get vaccinated submitted comments to a Miami Herald tip line, complainin­g of unclear directions, busy phone lines and appointmen­t schedules that are booked up for weeks.

As the confusion continued Wednesday, AARP Florida State Director Jeff Johnson urged the governor and local officials to be more transparen­t about the availabili­ty and distributi­on of vaccines throughout the state.

“Too many older people are frustrated by their inability to understand when and where they can get vaccinated,’‘ Johnson said. “And in some communitie­s, a long history of systemic discrimina­tion has left trust in tatters. This is jeopardizi­ng the effectiven­ess of a brilliant scientific success in developing the vaccines.”

He called the state to publicize a “clear and easyto-understand schedule of vaccine administra­tion for all population­s; and, the process by which individual­s may seek and obtain a vaccine.”

 ?? JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com ?? Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks to reporters Wednesday at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens to announce the facility as a location to get COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns. Eventually, the site will administer 1,000 vaccinatio­ns a day, DeSantis said.
JOSE A. IGLESIAS jiglesias@elnuevoher­ald.com Gov. Ron DeSantis speaks to reporters Wednesday at Hard Rock Stadium in Miami Gardens to announce the facility as a location to get COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns. Eventually, the site will administer 1,000 vaccinatio­ns a day, DeSantis said.

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