The Saratogian (Saratoga, NY)

How have storms affected COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns?

- By ANNE D’INNOCENZIO and LINDA A. JOHNSON

NEW YORK » Efforts to vaccinate Americans against COVID-19 have been stymied by a series of winter storms and outages that have hobbled transporta­tion hubs and highways in parts of the country not used to extreme cold weather.

That has created challenges for carriers such as UPS and FedEx, which have been on the front lines packaging and shipping the Moderna and Pfizer vaccines around the country. Both UPS’s hub in Louisville, Kentucky, and FedEx’s key hub in Memphis, Tennessee, have been affected. Meanwhile, several states have complained about

vaccinatio­n delays and have had to cancel appointmen­ts.

The fact that 6 million doses have languished in airport hubs for several days during a once-in-a-century pandemic has raised questions about how the U.S. government and the nation’s largest shipping companies haven’t been able — so far at least — to break the logjam.

WHAT’S THE PROBLEM?

White House officials say the snowstorms and power outages created a variety of challenges that slowed vaccinatio­n efforts in different ways. First, shippers like FedEx, UPS, and pharmaceut­ical distributo­r McKesson had to deal with workers who were snowed-in and couldn’t package, ship the vaccine kits and do other jobs. Then, road closures in many states kept trucks from delivering the vaccines. Finally, more than 2,000 vaccinatio­n sites were in areas with power outages.

Still, the government is moving ahead with plans to open five new mass vaccinatio­n centers, one in Philadelph­ia, and four others in the Florida cities of Miami, Orlando, Tampa and Jacksonvil­le.

HOW ARE CARRIERS TRYING TO FIX THE ISSUE?

FedEx says it’s relying on other hubs around the country to fix the problem. That includes its shipping hub in Indianapol­is — the company’s second largest after Memphis — and regional sorting hubs like the ones in Oakland, California, and Newark, N.J. FedEx says it’s not warehousin­g any COVID-19 vaccines in the U.S. UPS has been less forthcomin­g, saying only that it has “extensive contingenc­y plans” to keep goods moving when roadways are impassable or airports are closed because of severe weather. Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear told CNN Friday morning that the UPS hub in Louisville is up and running again.

The bad weather hit just as the carriers were already under strain due to the surge in online shipping, says Michael Zimmerman, a partner in the strategic operations practice of global management consulting firm Kearney. While the rerouting can help, the carriers will still have to deal with a lot of backups at each stage of the process, from shipping to sorting.

WHAT IS THE VACCINES’ NORMAL ROUTE FROM FACTORY TO CLINICS?

Pfizer has been shipping its vaccine doses for U.S. states directly from its factory outside Kalamazoo, Michigan, using its existing network of shipping companies, which includes UPS and FedEx. The twodose vaccine requires ultracold storage, at minus 112 degrees Fahrenheit to minus 76 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 80 degrees Celsius to minus 60 degrees Celsius), which will keep it stable for up to six months.

Moderna is using a third party contract manufactur­er for at least some of its vaccine production. Drug wholesaler McKesson, chosen by the federal government to distribute most COVID-19 vaccines, is handling shipments to hospitals and other medical providers. Some of those are going through transporta­tion hubs in Louisville, Kentucky, and Memphis, both of which have had their operations slowed by this week’s winter storms.

Moderna’s vaccine is shipped frozen, at minus 13 degrees Fahrenheit to 5 degrees Fahrenheit (minus 25 to minus 15 degrees Celsius). The vaccine vials also can be thawed after delivery and kept unopened in a regular refrigerat­or for a month before use.

HAVE THE DELAYS CAUSED VACCINES TO SPOIL?

Not as far we know. The White House says it’s working with shippers to make sure no vaccines are ruined during the weather delays.

A Pfizer spokesman said Wednesday that the company hasn’t had any of its vaccine spoiled due to weather-related shipment delays — but that was a couple of days ago. However, Pfizer ships its vaccine vials packed with dry ice in special thermal containers that can maintain the correct temperatur­e for up to 30 days. On Friday, the company submitted data to the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion indicating their vaccine is stable at temperatur­es a little below freezing for two weeks.

FedEx is delivering the Moderna vaccine, along with kits for administer­ing it, for McKesson. FedEx uses Bluetooth sensor devices affixed to vaccine shipments to monitor their temperatur­e and location to prevent problems, and has years of experience transporti­ng vaccines and other medical products that require tight temperatur­e control.

HOW HAVE THE DELAYS PLAYED OUT IN STATES?

A number of states including North Carolina, Tennessee and Washington have complained about the delays, citing cancellati­ons in appointmen­ts. In Tennessee, the state’s health agency said distributo­rs have been unable to pack and ship the COVID-19 vaccine this week due to the winter weather. According to a spokespers­on, “many vaccine clinics” were closed again Friday and appointmen­ts were being reschedule­d.

In Washington state, health officials estimated that more than 90% of this week’s allocation of vaccine doses would arrive late due to bad weather across the country, forcing the state to temporaril­y close two of its four mass vaccinatio­n sites and reschedule appointmen­ts there for next week. A third mass vaccinatio­n site was closing for the day, Saturday, because there weren’t any vaccines.

HOW LONG WILL THE DELAYS LAST?

The White House says the backlog should be cleared next week — most of it in the next few days.

White House coronaviru­s response adviser Andy Slavitt said 1.4 million doses were already in transit as of Friday, and that UPS and FedEx will do Saturday deliveries.

How damaging this week’s delays will have been is an open question.

Ernie Nichols, associate professor of supply chain management at the University of Memphis in Tennessee, says he doesn’t see the interrupti­on as a big problem once things thaw. However, Foster Finley, global co-leader of the transporta­tion and infrastruc­ture practice at AlixPartne­rs, says catching up in a week might be difficult.

OK, so you have to keep the water faucets dripping and shovel the car out. You may need jumper cables to get the fool thing running. Not that you really need to go anywhere.

At least you’re not a cattle rancher. Because your country cousins aren’t getting much sleep this week. Stubborn beasts that they are, a million cows out in the boondocks are deciding that conditions are just right for giving birth. Ten below zero, 30 mph winds and driving snow? Perfect.

Of course, it’s not really a decision. Back last spring when they were bred, winter seemed far away. Even so, there’s nothing like a blizzard to send a cow into labor. Lovely Suzanne, the sweetheart of my small herd, chose just such a February night to deliver her first calf on windswept high ground near the hay ring. I feared that the little heifer, wet from afterbirth, would freeze to death before morning.

Fortunatel­y, the pasture gate was close by. So I picked her up, backed out of the gate and kicked it shut. Then I carried her to the barn about 50 yards away. Suzanne anticipate­d my intentions, ran clear around the barn and was waiting in a stall before we got there. I don’t know which surprised me more: her intelligen­ce or her trust.

We named the calf Violet, and she grew to be the image of her mother, sweet-natured and lovely.

Along with blizzard conditions and the coldest temperatur­es in 20 years, what got me thinking about Suzanne and Violet was a Facebook post a friend sent me depicting an old boy on the frozen steppes of Oklahoma wallowing in a hot tub with an Angus calf he’d saved.

Posted by Lacie Lowry, an Oklahoma City TV journalist, at last reading it had drawn 1,153 comments, mainly photos of rescued calves in unusual places: laundry rooms, kitchens, snuggling by fireplaces with children and dogs and even the occasional cat. Calves in pickup cabs, calves under hair dryers, calves wrapped in comforters and blankets, even one calf wearing pajamas. Calves saved by farmers and ranchers all across the blizzard-battered Great Plains.

Trump voters, most of them, it’s worth rememberin­g if you’re an animal-loving Democrat prone to holding grudges. Decent folks, doing their best.

“The thing about cows,” my Perry County neighbor Micky Hill once told me, “is they’re always planning something.” He’d been recounting the saga of the Milk Bandits, half-grown twin heifers who’d taken to stealing their younger siblings’ milk.

“Daddy seen them calves was poorly,” he said. “They just wasn’t growing up right. Then one evening right around dusk, he seen them full-grown heifers sucking on mama cows. Not their own mamas. Other cows.

“So we took and put them in a borrowed pasture by themselves for a few weeks. Sure enough, the calves started thriving. Then come hay-feeding time, so we put them all back in together. Everything was fine for a little bit, but then the calves started looking sickly again.

“So one night Daddy slipped out to the barn after dark. Turned out them two heifers were chasing the mama cows around until they’d get one cornered. Then they’d each take a side, grab an udder and lift the cow clean off the ground to where she couldn’t kick or run away. They’d flat suck her dry in

 ?? MATT ROURKE ?? People wait in line for the opening of a 24-hour, walk-up COVID-19 vaccinatio­n clinic hosted by the Black Doctors COVID-19 Consortium at Temple University’s Liacouras Center in Philadelph­ia, Friday, Feb. 19, 2021. Efforts to vaccinate Americans against COVID-19 have been stymied by a series of winter storms and outages in parts of the country not used to extreme cold weather, and hobbled transporta­tion hubs and highways.
MATT ROURKE People wait in line for the opening of a 24-hour, walk-up COVID-19 vaccinatio­n clinic hosted by the Black Doctors COVID-19 Consortium at Temple University’s Liacouras Center in Philadelph­ia, Friday, Feb. 19, 2021. Efforts to vaccinate Americans against COVID-19 have been stymied by a series of winter storms and outages in parts of the country not used to extreme cold weather, and hobbled transporta­tion hubs and highways.
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