Rick Scott calls for investigation into how Florida is distributing COVID vaccines
Sen. Rick Scott has called for a federal investigation into Florida’s coronavirusvaccine distribution, citing reports that donors of a South Florida nursing home are being offered life-saving shots ahead of the general public.
According to The Washington Post, an executive at West Palm Beach’s MorseLife Health System called donors and members of the assisted-living facility’s board to offer them vaccinations while millions of elderly and vulnerable
Floridians struggled to get access to the shots. Scott, Florida’s governor from 2011-19, called the details of the report “disgusting,” “immoral” and evidence of “gross mismanagement.”
“We have to do everything possible to get this vaccine out in an efficient and fair manner, and I am calling for a full Congressional investigation into reports of improper vaccine distribution,” Scott said in a statement.
Also on Thursday, Gov. Ron DeSantis, Scott’s successor, dismissed Scott’s call for an investigation, saying he had already ordered Chief Inspector General Melinda Miguel to
investigate MorseLife Health System.
At a press conference in Vero Beach, the governor said: “This is something we’re already investigating. … The nursing home and long-term care program is for residents and staff of long-term care facilities. That’s who it’s for.”
When asked whether Scott’s news release was meant to imply criticism of DeSantis, a Scott spokesman did not immediately respond.
However, the forceful call from Scott is the latest example of tension between the two men. The two Republicans clashed last year over the state’s failing unemployment system, with each pointing a finger at the other for the debacle. After Congress passed the Coronavirus Aid, Relief, and Economic Security Act, Scott sent a letter to all 50 governors asking for a detailed breakdown of how states spent the federal money. Months later, few had responded; DeSantis was not one of them.
Up ahead for both is 2024, when Scott and DeSantis are considered to be presidential hopefuls.
On Thursday, more Florida news outlets published more reports of the wellconnected getting early access to the vaccine. The Sun Sentinel reported that some high-end medical practices in Palm Beach County got their own share of vaccinations to give to presumably wealthy patients. And the Miami Herald cited three hospital chains in South Florida that gave vaccinations to board members — although neither news organization found evidence that those who got shots were younger than 65.
State guidelines say the first doses of the vaccines should go to residents older than 65, front-line healthcare workers, first responders, staff and residents at long-term care facilities and those whom hospitals deem to be especially vulnerable to the virus.