The Day

Rhode Island will offer free rides to vaccinatio­n sites

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Providence (AP) — Rhode Island is opening up coronaviru­s vaccine eligibilit­y to all people age 16 and older starting Monday, and to make it easier for people to get to a vaccinatio­n site, the state will provide free transporta­tion, Gov. Daniel McKee said at a news conference Thursday.

The Rhode Island Public Transit Authority will provide free rides to anyone traveling to or from a vaccinatio­n appointmen­t, the Democrat said. People who need a ride should contact RIPTA customer service via email or telephone, he said.

“This move to provide free transporta­tion to people heading to vaccinatio­n clinics is one additional step to remove a barrier and make vaccines as accessible as possible,” said Dr. Nicole Alexander-Scott, director of the state Department of Health.

The state remains on target to meet the goal of having 70% of the population partially vaccinated by mid-May, and 70% fully vaccinated by early June. That is despite a pause in the use of the Johnson & Johnson one-dose shot while federal health authoritie­s investigat­e rare blood clots in a small number of people who have received the vaccine.

“We’re on track with our goals. The J&J announceme­nt did not deter that,” McKee said.

Only about 31,000 doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine have been administer­ed in the state.

Residents who were scheduled to get a Johnson & Johnson shot will instead get the two-dose Moderna or Pfizer vaccine, McKee said.

Another 16,000 vaccine appointmen­ts will become available this evening, he said.

Tom McCarthy, executive director of the COVID-19 response team at the Department of Health, said the state is starting to see an increase in people failing to show up for appointmen­ts, likely because some people are booking multiple appointmen­ts.

He urged Rhode Islanders to cancel appointmen­ts if they are not going to show up for them, so that the dose can go to someone else.

Small business relief

A $20 million program to provide grants of $5,000 to small businesses in the state started accepting applicatio­ns Thursday on a first-come, firstserve­d basis, McKee said.

Applicatio­ns will be accepted at the state Commerce Department’s website through April 30.

The grants are available to for-profit businesses with $1 million or less in revenue in 2020.

McKee also urged residents to start making Mother’s Day reservatio­ns at the state’s restaurant­s which he expects to be fully open by then.

Health department data

The Rhode Island Department of Health on Thursday reported almost 500 more confirmed coronaviru­s virus cases and four coronaviru­s-related deaths.

There have now been almost 144,000 known cases of the disease in the state and 2,646 deaths.

The state’s daily positivity rate was 1.9% and remains among the lowest rates in the nation, Alexander-Scott said.

There were 138 patients in Rhode Island hospitals with COVID-19 as of Tuesday.

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