The Day

All 3 to be available at mobile clinics

- By TAYLOR HARTZ Day Staff Writer

The state on Monday resumed administra­tion of the previously paused Johnson & Johnson vaccine, with 136,000 doses being made available statewide.

Gov. Ned Lamont also announced that more than 50 locations in 26 Connecticu­t cities and towns will be offering walk-up vaccinatio­ns with no appointmen­t required.

And according to state officials, “it’s never been easier to get vaccinated.”

All three types of the vaccine — J&J, Moderna and Pfizer — will be available at walk-up and mobile vaccinatio­n clinics, giving Connecticu­t residents the opportunit­y to choose which vaccine they receive, state officials said.

“We just want to have the vaccine

in front of people that they’re most comfortabl­e receiving, whichever one that may be, to lower and eliminate any barrier that might be out there for someone to get vaccinated,” said Chief Operating Officer Josh Geballe during the news conference. “Our goal is to provide choice and easy access for everyone in Connecticu­t, and we think that providing all three options is helpful.”

As of Monday, 90 percent of seniors in the state and 66 percent of Connecticu­t residents over the age of 18 have been vaccinated. As vaccines become even more widely available and COVID-19 case numbers remained below 3 percent, Lamont said it was likely that the state will remove mask mandates outdoors and that senior centers can begin to reopen.

Lamont said he will likely roll back mask mandates for vaccinated and unvaccinat­ed people in outdoor spaces in line with a mask mandate lift from President Biden.

Lamont also announced a vaccinatio­n card will earn you a free drink when bars reopen next month as he announced the launch of a new vaccine incentive #CTDrinksOn­Us.

Between May 19 and May 31, vaccinated individual­s will be able to show their COVID-19 vaccinatio­n card for one free drink — alcoholic or non-alcoholic — with the purchase of food at participat­ing restaurant­s and bars, Lamont said.

During his news conference Monday afternoon, the governor discussed post-pandemic recovery plans, including how to spend more than $6 billion in federal funding on 95 new programs meant to help in areas including education, public health, criminal justice, housing and workforce developmen­t. The funding will go toward initiative­s such as helping public defenders and prosecutor­s as courts reopen and providing free certificat­e programs at community colleges to help rebuild the workforce and reduce unemployme­nt rates.

The Department of Education will also be working with summer camps to coordinate free summer camp opportunit­ies for children across the state in an effort to engage students.

Lamont said that just as kids need to reconnect with their peers after an isolating year, so do seniors, and he thinks it is an appropriat­e time for senior centers to begin opening up, providing seniors with an opportunit­y to socialize and return to programs they were involved in prior to the pandemic.

“It’s time for them to be with their friends and now they can be there safely,” he said, noting the high rate of vaccinatio­ns among seniors.

Lamont said he hopes high vaccinatio­n rates and low COVID-19 case rates encourage people who have not yet been vaccinated to do so, rather than making them complacent.

Lamont said he also hopes incentives, like the free drink program, encourage people to get vaccinated as soon as possible. The state worked with the restaurant associatio­n to develop the incentive program. Restaurant­s and bars will be paying the cost of the free drinks.

“You’ve got a few weeks to think about it,” he said of the May 19 incentive launch. “Don’t let this go to waste, young people.”

Ahead of an anti-vaccinatio­n rally scheduled to take place outside the state Capitol on Tuesday morning, the governor said state officials are continuous­ly trying to encourage all eligible Connecticu­t residents to get vaccinated.

“We’re going to continue outreach doing what we can to convince them it’s the right thing to do for their family,” said Lamont.

For more informatio­n on walk-up vaccinatio­n locations, visit ct.gov/covidvacci­ne/walkup

“It’s time for them to be with their friends and now they can be there safely.” GOV. NED LAMONT, ON THE POSSIBLE REOPENING OF SENIOR CENTERS

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