The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Kemp: Vaccine doses will be shipped to high- demand areas

Governor disputes criticism of distributi­on performanc­e in state.

- By Eric Stirgus eric. stirgus@ ajc. com and Ariel Hart ahart@ ajc. com

Gov. Brian Kemp, under fifire for the state’s lagging COVID- 19 vaccinatio­n numbers, on Tuesday pushed back and touted a roster of imminent measures his administra­tion was undertakin­g to get more shots into Georgians’ arms to halt the pandemic’s spread.

In a nod to the overwhelmi­ng demand in metro Atlanta — in contrast to other parts of the state, where open appointmen­ts sat idle — Kemp said the state would shift dose allocation­s to places where they would more likely be used. After already opening vaccinatio­n to the majority of adults this week, he added judges and court personnel to the list of those eligible. He and state leaders at his side also pleaded with rural residents to make appointmen­ts for shots.

“The media and t hose playing pandemic politics will continue to focus on whichever statistic of the day paints Georgia in a bad light,” Kemp said, saying his administra­tion’s relative success vaccinatin­g seniors gets

short shrift. “But I will tell you I’m not worried about politics. I’m worried about following the science and the data about who is most vulnerable.”

Kemp took aim at federal data showing Georgia with one of the nation’s worst vaccinatio­n rates. He contends the CDC numbers are wrong because 250,000 doses distribute­d directly to pharmacies under a federal program were not included in Georgia’s vaccinatio­n data although the doses were given out.

As of Tuesday, the U. S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported that Georgia had administer­ed 26,468 vaccine doses per 100,000 residents. That was the worst record of any state, and the worst of any U. S.- controlled place except for Puerto Rico and the Federated States of Micronesia. Georgia falls several spots below Mississipp­i, which administer­ed 30,447 doses per 100,000 people to date, according to the CDC.

The federal pharmacy data flaw cited by Kemp occurred nationwide, so it was unclear whether fixing it would improve Georgia’s standing.

Kemp also confirmed the Georgia Emergency Management and Homeland Security Agency would open and run five new mass vaccinatio­n centers starting today, as previously announced. That will make for a total of nine across the state administer­ing up to 45,000 doses per week.

The governor also warned those health care providers hoarding doses in fear of not having second doses on hand or for other reasons could see future doses go elsewhere. His office is sending letters to those providers, telling them they must administer at least 80% of the doses they receive.

“The Biden administra­tion continues to provide consistent vaccine distributi­on informatio­n to the state so there is no reason for providers to withhold doses,” he said.

The response came as Kemp i s being l ashed by critics who said the state bungled distributi­on, that the system for getting appointmen­ts is confusing, and that too little has been done to get vaccines to all of the communitie­s that have had to bear the worst of the pandemic. Critics took particular umbrage at his office’s suggestion Monday that metro Atlantans consider traveling to South Georgia to get some of the open appointmen­ts there.

Stacey Abrams, Kemp’s opponent in the 2018 governor’s race, said the state was “just failing at its job” in protecting more vulnerable residents from the disease.

On Tuesday, a pair of organizati­ons founded by Abrams launched a “Count Me In” campaign aimed at helping Black, Hispanic and other minority communitie­s with the vaccinatio­n process.

While Kemp and his aides have cited a roster of challenges beyond their control, including the state’s public health structure and vaccine hesitancy, Abrams said the real issue was making the vaccines reachable.

“Hesitancy is not the challenge — access is,” Abrams said.

“Instead of sending people from metro Atlanta to southwest Georgia, there should instead be a response where we meet people where they are,” she said. “You go to where the people are instead of leaving people to find their own way.”

Others voiced frustratio­n at the state’s welter of vaccinatio­n registrati­on sites, some of which aren’t linked to and can’t communicat­e with one another. People are getting appointmen­ts through one website and not canceling with another. People wanting an appointmen­t that might come from one website never know it’s available as they’re waitlisted by another website.

Neither Kemp nor other state leaders were able at the press event to say how many people were now on waiting lists at the various registrati­on sites to get a vaccinatio­n appointmen­t. But more than 19,000 people were wait- li sted by the Department of Public Health website Tuesday, an agency spokeswoma­n said. At the same time, the agency has 36,870 appointmen­ts open, indicating that open slots are not in locations where people are seeking them.

Each local public health office also may have its own separate registrati­on system. On Monday, the one run by Fulton County made an IT error and mistakenly double- booked hundreds of appointmen­ts.

Greg Kavouras said he was one of them. He waited three hours Tuesday at a Fulton County site before he said he and many others left. “If Fulton County and the state of Georgia really wants to administer these shots, they must greatly improve the delivery system,” he said.

Kemp announced the five staterun centers earlier this month, and a large federal center expected for Atlanta was announced March 5. Only two of the nine GEMA centers are in metro Atlanta. The five new GEMA centers are to open in Bartow, Chatham, Muscogee, Ware and Washington counties. Late last month, state sites opened in Albany, Clarkesvil­le, Hapeville and Macon.

An opening date for federal management of t he center, at Mercedes- Benz Stadium, has not been announced.

Kemp’s public health commiss i oner, Dr. Kathleen Toomey, acknowledg­ed the problems created by having separate websites. She said DPH was already locked into its Microsoft vaccinatio­n registrati­on system when GEMA “chose to go a different route.” Putting all that aside, like Kemp and the other aides present she simply asked Georgians to make a vaccinatio­n appointmen­t if they can.

“This is going to be our freedom to get back to the Georgia we want to be,” Toomey said.

 ?? ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM ?? Gov. Brian Kemp gives an update on vaccine distributi­on. More than 19,000 were wait- listed by the Department of Public Health on Tuesday, but the agency’s 36,870 open appointmen­ts indicated openings are not in higher- demand locations.
ALYSSA POINTER/ ALYSSA. POINTER@ AJC. COM Gov. Brian Kemp gives an update on vaccine distributi­on. More than 19,000 were wait- listed by the Department of Public Health on Tuesday, but the agency’s 36,870 open appointmen­ts indicated openings are not in higher- demand locations.

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