Monterey Herald

Newsom’s vaccine plan bogs down

- DAn Walters

As a deadly surge of COVID-19 began hammering California late last year, Gov. Gavin Newsom imposed new restrictio­ns on personal and economic activities and repeatedly promised that massive vaccinatio­ns would soon stop its spread. “It’s a sprint, not a marathon,” he would say in urging California­ns to wear masks, avoid large gatherings and otherwise slow infection rates while the state implemente­d an ambitious vaccinatio­n program.

Weeks later, the disease is still raging uncontroll­ably, especially in Southern California. As of Sunday, according to a CalMatters tracker, the state had 2,670,962 confirmed cases and 29,701 deaths.

Meanwhile, the vaccinatio­n program that Newsom promised is seemingly bogged down. Newsom said Monday that 783,436 doses of vaccine had been administer­ed, 31.6% of the 2.5 million it had received from suppliers. However, that’s below the national rate of 36% and, according to a Bloomberg survey published on Monday, one of the lowest rates of any state.

Although California had spent months planning the vaccinatio­n rollout and had adopted a seemingly bulletproo­f priority list, with health care workers at the top, in practice it has lagged behind expectatio­ns.

One factor, apparently, is a software program that isn’t working as expected.

“California’s COVID-19 vaccine rollout is being at least partially slowed by technical problems with a software program used by the state to coordinate vaccine distributi­on,” the Los Angeles Times reported last week.

“The online software system, PrepMod, is a vaccine management tool used to coordinate waitlists and inventory as well as send email proof of vaccinatio­ns to patients. It is unclear how widespread the problem is, but some providers, ranging from public clinics to nursing home operators, say the system is at times limiting access to the muchneeded vaccines. The software is hosted on the state’s CalVax website.”

That a state technology glitch is impeding the vaccinatio­n program should not surprise anyone because California is notorious for high-tech systems that promise better and faster services, but fail to deliver — such as those in the Department of Motor Vehicles and the Employment Developmen­t Department. In fact, snafus in the state’s infectious disease reporting system led to underrepor­ted COVID-19 tests last year.

The stumbling vaccinatio­n program is — as it should be — highly embarrassi­ng for Newsom.

“I don’t think California­ns can understand why we have hundreds of thousands of doses sitting there, and they’re not being administer­ed,’’ Garry South, a Democratic strategist who advised Newsom’s 2010 gubernator­ial campaign, told Politico. “California’s been through nearly 10 months of hell, and now there’s potentiall­y a light at the end of tunnel with these vaccines — but it doesn’t do anybody any good if they’re not administer­ed.”

As he unveiled his 2021-22 budget last Friday, Newsom was peppered with questions from reporters about the lagging vaccinatio­n rollout.

He included $372 million for vaccinatio­n distributi­on in the budget, acknowledg­ed the program “is not good enough” and promised that the state would inoculate an additional one million California­ns over the next nine days.

“I would expect — and should expect — that we are going to see a substantia­lly higher number of vaccines administer­ed in the coming days and coming weeks,” said Newsom, later adding: “Hold me accountabl­e.”

Yes, he will be held accountabl­e, not only for his current nine-day promise but for many days after that. Although a million vaccinatio­ns in nine days sounds impressive, at that rate it would take much of the year to administer the lifesaving drugs to 40 million California­ns.

Fully vaccinatin­g California is more likely to be a marathon than a sprint.

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