The Mercury News

‘Vaccine passport’ plays up a divide

A special status for those done with shots leaves many behind

- By Fiona Kelliher and Leonardo Castañeda Staff writers

California crossed a major threshold last week: For the first time, state officials moved to adopt a policy that would give residents who are vaccinated access to different events and activities than those who aren’t.

New requiremen­ts for a “vaccine passport” — showing proof of vaccinatio­n to attend gatherings like weddings, conference­s, concerts or theater shows — set California apart from states looking to ban such requiremen­ts and raise questions surroundin­g vaccine access

and privilege in a region that has repeatedly failed to protect its most vulnerable population­s.

Starting April 15, venues hosting concerts, theater or other events may welcome larger crowds if they require attendees to show proof either of a negative COVID-19 test or full vaccinatio­n, state health officials said Friday. Those who are vaccinated will also be allowed to sit in special sections without social distancing.

Although experts laud the decision as a reasonable way to lower the risk of transmissi­on while the economy reopens, many worry that vaccine passports come at the expense of California­ns who have already suffered most throughout the pandemic — and before the state can assure a steady stream of supplies to vaccinate them.

“It’s an automatic exclusion. You’re adding another nail in the coffin to the same population that has been denied the availabili­ty to vaccines, that is dealing with social determinan­ts of health, that is dealing with unemployme­nt,” said Dolores Alvarado, CEO of Community Health Partnershi­p, which oversees clinics for underserve­d South Bay residents. “And now you’re going to add another layer to it that says, ‘You cannot be part of all these things we’re doing.’”

Elsewhere, the passports have sparked the same conservati­ve backlash that consumed maskwearin­g last spring. Florida’s Gov. Ron Desantis, a Republican, banned requiremen­ts for vaccine documentat­ion in businesses and government agencies outright Friday, saying they threaten “individual freedom” in his executive order. Pennsylvan­ia senators are drawing up similar legislatio­n.

But Bay Area experts are less concerned with political debate and more with how the rules could leave behind those for whom getting vaccinated remains rife with structural, technologi­cal or financial barriers.

California’s Latino community makes up nearly 40% of the population and 50% of COVID-19 infections, but just 19% of vaccinatio­ns received so far, according to the California Department of Public Health. Meanwhile, residents in the top quartile of the California Healthy Places Index — which rates census tracts based on factors like income and health care access — make up about 30% of those who have received at least one dose, while those in the bottom quartile make up just 20%.

Requiring vaccinatio­ns at large gatherings ameliorate­s the chance that those events could cause a “supersprea­der” surge of COVID-19 infections, said Dr. Kirsten Bibbins-Domingo, an epidemiolo­gist with UC San Francisco. But she’s wrestling with the fact that the new rules arrived before Latino and Black communitie­s have been widely vaccinated.

Another red flag for community health advocates is the idea of a digital passport on one’s phone or device, as State Health Officer Dr. Tomás J. Aragón hinted could become the norm in a call with reporters Friday. Throughout the pandemic, reliance on online platforms has made it more difficult for many to sign up for first coronaviru­s tests and now vaccines.

“Showing proof of vaccinatio­n is very likely to be a tool we need to use to safely reopen parts of our economy,” Bibbins-domingo said. “It’s not an inherently inequitabl­e idea. What is inequitabl­e is doing it at a time when we have eligible people who cannot get vaccines right now, and we have deep inequities in those who have been deeply affected by the disease.”

Santa Clara County Executive Jeff Smith, meanwhile, believes that vaccine passports are a “false reassuranc­e” given the widespread detection of different COVID-19 variants across the state — but that the county is hamstrung when it comes to enacting tighter restrictio­ns without regional support. Ideally, he added, the state would wait until hard-hit communitie­s reached a certain vaccinatio­n threshold before moving ahead with the scheme.

Aragón promised that officials are closely watching how well vaccines protect against variants and that supplies open up significan­tly in late April. And despite a manufactur­ing disruption, California is expecting 572,700 doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine this week, 215,400 the following week, and another 215,400 the week after that.

“We anticipate that the majority of people will be able to do this, and the barriers will be removed,” he told reporters Friday. CDPH declined to respond further Saturday.

For some anxious residents, vaccine passports seem like a useful way to at least reduce some risk. Waiting outside the Aloha Skate Rink mass vaccinatio­n site in East San Jose on Saturday, Milpitas resident Minh Nguyen said he supported the idea but that it’s not carte blanche to cast off other precaution­s.

“Absolutely, show that card,” Nguyen said. “But I still suggest people wear their mask, just to be extra careful.”

Hardware engineer Nima Ardestani, who had just been vaccinated, said he’s in no rush to go back to concerts or travel — but that he might consider paying a little extra for a vaccinated patronsonl­y section at a concert or airplane.

“It would be nice, but I don’t know if it’s entirely necessary,” Ardestani said. “I can take a 5% risk.”

The extent to which the passports could permeate California­ns’ day-to-day life — whether through restaurant reservatio­ns, priority for certain shoppers or recreation­al sports — remains an open discussion among experts. Aragón said that documentat­ion will not be required for essential services.

While showing proof of inoculatio­n makes sense for bigger, riskier gatherings, it’s unlikely that they will be needed for most everyday activities — in part because there is no real mechanism for enforcemen­t, Bibbins-domingo surmised.

“It’s hard to imagine we’re going to live in a state where everything we do requires showing this,” she said, “but that remains to be seen.”

 ?? RAY CHAVEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER ?? Cruz Gomez, left, and wife Izabel Matias Mendoza wait in line with their young son and teen daughter for Moderna vaccines last month at a clinic run by La Clinica de la Raza in Oakland. The center offers free vaccinatio­ns to the Mayan community on Thursdays.
RAY CHAVEZ — STAFF PHOTOGRAPH­ER Cruz Gomez, left, and wife Izabel Matias Mendoza wait in line with their young son and teen daughter for Moderna vaccines last month at a clinic run by La Clinica de la Raza in Oakland. The center offers free vaccinatio­ns to the Mayan community on Thursdays.

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