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Troops deployed for vaccine drive

FEMA requests 10K service members to staff 100 shot sites

- By Lolita C. Baldor and Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

FEMA requests as many as 10,000 service members to help staff 100 shot centers.

WASHINGTON — The Pentagon will deploy more than 1,100 troops to five vaccinatio­n centers in what will be the first wave of increased military support for the White House campaign to get more Americans inoculated against COVID-19.

President Joe Biden has called for setting up 100 mass vaccinatio­n centers around the country within a month. Two of the five new military teams will go to vaccinatio­n centers opening in California. Three additional centers are expected to be announced soon.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency has asked the Pentagon to supply as many as 10,000 service members to staff 100 centers. Defense Secretary Lloyd Austin approved the initial five teams, but the others will be approved in separate tranches as FEMA identifies the other site locations.

The military deployment comes as the nation is in a race against a virus that is spawning mutations which may make it spread more easily and inflict deadlier disease. More than 458,000 people in the U.S. have been killed by the virus.

Only about 2% of Americans have received the required two-dose vaccinatio­n regimen that confers optimum protection with the Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna vaccines currently available. To reach widespread, or “herd” immunity, the U.S. must vaccinate 70% to 85% of its population, according to Dr. Anthony Fauci, the government’s top infectious disease expert.

That would be roughly 230 million to 280 million people, compared to 6.9 million who are currently fully immunized with two shots.

More help could be on the way soon. Johnson & Johnson announced this week it is seeking emergency use authorizat­ion from the Food and Drug Administra­tion for its vaccine, which requires only one shot.

Each of the Pentagon’s five military teams includes 222 personnel, including 80 who will give the vaccines, as well as nurses and other support staff. The teams would be able to provide about 6,000 shots a day.

The five teams represent a growing use of the active duty military to a vaccinatio­n campaign that already involves nearly 100 National Guard teams in 29 states across the country. National Guard leaders told Associated Press that they are now considerin­g training additional Guard members to give shots, so that they can also expand vaccinatio­ns in more remote and rural portions of their states.

Gen. Dan Hokanson, chief of the National Guard Bureau, said the Guard has the ability to field about 200 additional teams. Training other medical personnel to give the vaccinatio­n shots, he said, would potentiall­y provide more.

“If we reach the point where we’ve fully implemente­d all of our folks who can (give shots), then they’re looking at potential training opportunit­ies if we’re going to need more than that,” said Hokanson. “We’re going to do everything to make a difference and meet whatever that need is.”

The Pentagon has said that the FEMA teams could be a mix of active duty, National Guard and Reserves. But Hokanson and Maj. Gen. Jerry Fenwick, director of the Guard’s Office of the Joint Surgeon, said that at this point, the FEMA teams are more likely going to be filled largely by active duty troops. The Guard, they said, will probably be tapped by their governors for use in their own states and are more likely to be used in remote, rural locations.

Guard leaders said nearly 100 mobile vaccinatio­n teams are already delivering more than 50,000 shots a day.

Pentagon officials have made it clear that they are being careful about tapping National Guard and Reserves, because in many cases those service members are already working in medical jobs in their civilian lives at local hospitals and medical centers. Hokanson noted that while the Guard could staff as many as 600 vaccine teams, he has to cut that number about in half because of those types of civilian job restrictio­ns.

Biden has compared the campaign against COVID19 to a war. Alongside the troop deployment, he also invoked a Cold War-era law called the Defense Production Act to help bolster manufactur­ing of vaccines, at-home COVID-19 testing kits and nitrile gloves used by health care workers and vaccinator­s. Referred to as the DPA, the law in essence allows the government to assign missions to private companies during national emergencie­s.

Tim Manning, the White House’s COVID-19 supply coordinato­r, said Friday the administra­tion was looking to help drugmaker Pfizer clear a bottleneck around fill-and-finish capabiliti­es with vaccine production by giving the drugmaker first priority to access needed supplies.

Manning said also said the government is investing in six manufactur­ers to develop at-home and pointof-care COVID-19 tests, with the goal of producing 60 million tests by the end of the summer. Earlier in the week, the White House announced a $230 million contract with Ellume, manufactur­er of an at-home test approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion. No prescripti­on is required for the over-the-counter test.

 ?? MICHAEL M. SANTIAGO/GETTY ?? A National Guard soldier enforces social distancing as people withstand poor weather while waiting in line Friday to enter the COVID-19 vaccinatio­n site at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx borough of New York City.
MICHAEL M. SANTIAGO/GETTY A National Guard soldier enforces social distancing as people withstand poor weather while waiting in line Friday to enter the COVID-19 vaccinatio­n site at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx borough of New York City.

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