The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Work underway to get shots to school workers

- By David Mekeel dmekeel@readingeag­le.com @dmekeel on Twitter

Pennsylvan­ia’s plan to inoculate school staff and child care center workers with the newly approved Johnson & Johnson COVID vaccine is moving forward fast and furiously.

During a press briefing Thursday, acting Secretary of Health Alison Beam said an effort to have retail pharmacies provide shots for child care workers had already begun. And mass vaccinatio­n sites for school employees will be up and running as soon as March 10.

Gov. Tom Wolf on Wednesday unveiled the plan to use the state’s allotment of the one-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine on those working in education. The governor said the idea is to help quickly increase the number of students learning in-person.

Thursday’s briefing provided a bit more informatio­n on how the program will work.

Beam said the state is working with Rite Aid, Walmart and Topco to get 30,000 Johnson & Johnson doses into the arms of child care workers.

The state is providing the pharmacies with contact informatio­n for licensed child care centers, and the pharmacies will be contacting those centers directly to schedule appointmen­ts, Beam said.

That is “starting as soon as today,” she said. The vaccinatio­n effort is to get child care centers fully operationa­l.

Vaccinatio­ns for school employees are being coordinate­d through the state’s 28 regional intermedia­te units, including the Montgomery County Intermedia­te Unit.

The intermedia­te units are surveying the schools they serve to get a handle on how many doses are needed. The vaccine will be distribute­d based on those numbers, Beam said.

The first round of shots — the state is receiving an initial supply of 94,600 doses separate from the 30,000 for child care workers — will go to those working with prekinderg­arten, elementary school, special needs, and English-as-asecond language students.

The vaccines will be available for all those working in public and private schools.

Beam said the department has been informed that it will be a few weeks before the state gets a second shipment of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

School employees will get their shots at mass vaccinatio­n clinics organized by regional intermedia­te units. The Pennsylvan­ia National Guard and AMI Expedition­ary Healthcare will administer the vaccine at those sites.

Randy Padfield, director of the Pennsylvan­ia Emergency Management

Agency, said during Thursday’s briefing that the sites will be open daily and on weekends to make sure appointmen­ts don’t interfere with work schedules.

Each school will receive a schedule of appointmen­ts for their employees to sign up for, Padfield said. The sign-ups will be done through an online system.

Padfield said the sites should begin operating between March 10 and 13. Many will be held at regional intermedia­te school buildings, however some will also be held at alternate, satellite sites or by using a mobile vaccinatio­n unit.

The sites will average about 500 vaccinatio­ns per day, Padfield said, with some larger ones vaccinatin­g up to 1,000 people per day.

Details on a Berks County site are not yet available.

Acting Secretary of Education Noe Ortega said during Thursday’s briefing that the new vaccinatio­n program is “very exciting news for our schools and communitie­s.”

Ortega said that getting school employees vaccinated will get them and students back to where they want and need to be — inside classrooms.

“Our collective priority is to reopen classes and schools as soon as possible,” he said.

Reopening schools will increase learning opportunit­ies for students, Ortega said, and provide better access to the variety of services schools provide. It

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