Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

ALABAMA EXTENDS mask mandate into March.

- KIM CHANDLER Informatio­n for this article was contribute­d by Don Thompson, Kathleen Ronayne, Janie Har, Olga Rodriquez and Christophe­r Weber of The Associated Press.

MONTGOMERY, Ala. — Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey on Thursday extended a statewide mask order into March as the state continues to face high numbers of covid-19 cases and the vaccinatio­n rollout has been hindered by a limited supply.

“The mask mandate remains one step we can all take in order to keep some balance in our daily lives and remain healthy and safe,” Ivey said during a news conference at the state Capitol.

The Republican governor said the state saw a record-setting surge of cases in the wake of winter holidays. Although the state is beginning to emerge from that spike, state hospitaliz­ations remain high. Ivey said that at one point last week the state had only 39 empty intensive care unit beds.

The order, which has been in place since July, requires masks in public when interactin­g within 6 feet with people from another household. The mask order will last until 5 p.m. March 5.

Thousands of people this week flocked to vaccinatio­n sites as the state began inoculatin­g people 75 and older in addition to first responders and health care workers. But thousands more jammed state lines trying unsuccessf­ully to get an appointmen­t.

State Health Officer Dr. Scott Harris said the biggest obstacle to vaccinatio­n is the available supply.

“We’ve certainly heard from many people in the public who are angry and frustrated about the vaccine program because they don’t feel they understand how they can get a vaccine. I want you to know we hear all of those people and we share some of those frustratio­ns as well,” Harris said.

Harris said they are working to get the vaccinatio­ns out as quickly as possible.

“If you are a person who wants vaccine in Alabama,

you are going to get that,” he said.

The state of nearly 5 million people has so far had 446,000 vaccine doses delivered, according to state numbers. The state has administer­ed 184,000 doses so far. There are more than 600,000 people who are currently eligible for the vaccinatio­ns.

Separately, California said it’s safe to immediatel­y begin using a batch of coronaviru­s vaccine doses after health officials urged a halt to injections and held a review because several people had reactions.

Wednesday’s decision frees up more than 300,000 doses to counties, cities and hospitals struggling to obtain supplies. With the largest U.S. population at 40 million people, California

has the second-highest covid-19 death toll in the country behind New York.

The state Department of Public Health on Sunday urged a pause in the use of a specific lot of the Moderna virus after fewer than 10 people who received shots

at a San Diego vaccinatio­n site needed medical care, possibly as a result of rare but severe allergic reactions.

But after a safety review and consultati­on with Moderna and health agencies, the state “found no scientific basis to continue the pause” and said vaccinatio­ns can “immediatel­y resume,” state epidemiolo­gist Dr. Erica Pan said in a statement.

“These findings should continue to give California­ns confidence that vaccines are safe and effective, and that

the systems put in place to ensure vaccine safety are rigorous and science-based,” Pan said, adding that some of her family members had received it.

Large counties have been opening up more mass vaccinatio­n sites as they struggle with an unpreceden­ted demand. Officials are pinning hopes on President Joe Biden’s promise to ramp up vaccinatio­n resources.

“Under a Biden administra­tion, our country has a fighting chance at defeating this virus,” California state Sen. Scott Wiener said Wednesday.

 ?? (AP/Jae C. Hong) ?? Medical workers prepare the Pfizer-BioNTech covid-19 vaccine for farmworker­s Thursday at Tudor Ranch in Mecca, Calif. State health officials cleared the use of a batch of Moderna vaccine Thursday after a pause because of allergic reactions at one site.
(AP/Jae C. Hong) Medical workers prepare the Pfizer-BioNTech covid-19 vaccine for farmworker­s Thursday at Tudor Ranch in Mecca, Calif. State health officials cleared the use of a batch of Moderna vaccine Thursday after a pause because of allergic reactions at one site.
 ?? (AP/Kim Chandler) ?? Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey announces an extension of the mask order Thursday at the state Capitol in Montgomery.
(AP/Kim Chandler) Alabama Gov. Kay Ivey announces an extension of the mask order Thursday at the state Capitol in Montgomery.

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