Antelope Valley Press

Dodger Stadium vaccine site closing by end of May

- By JOHN ANTCZAK

LOS ANGELES — Los Angeles Mayor Eric Garcetti announced Friday that the COVID-19 mass vaccinatio­n site at Dodger Stadium will close by the end of May, part of a trend in California to bring doses closer to where people live as appointmen­ts in some places go unfilled.

Winding down operations at the stadium marks the transition of the city’s vaccinatio­n efforts to appointmen­t-free options as well as putting more doses into walk-up centers and mobile clinics, the mayor said in a statement.

Dodger Stadium became one of the nation’s most prominent sites for Coronaviru­s response, first for testing and then delivery of vaccine doses to people waiting in long lines of cars.

“Dodger Stadium set the standard for sports franchises and community institutio­ns playing a starring role in our COVID-19 response for the country,” Garcetti said.

More than 1 million people were tested at the stadium, and the number of vaccine doses administer­ed there has topped 420,000, according to the city.

Overall, nearly 30 million vaccinatio­ns have been administer­ed in California, where the rates of new infections and deaths have plunged far below levels of the winter surge and restrictio­ns on businesses and daily life are easing. Nearly 19 million people of an estimated 32 million who are eligible for vaccine are partially or fully inoculated.

Orange County’s big vaccinatio­n site at Disneyland was scheduled to close Friday as the theme park reopened to visitors for the first time in more than a year. Similarly, a major site at Six Flags Magic Mountain in northern Los Angeles County recently closed as that park welcomed visitors back.

North of San Francisco, Marin County will close two mass vaccinatio­n sites in San Rafael by the end of May. Health officials are shifting vaccinatio­ns to mobile units to reach unvaccinat­ed people and offering home visits to people who can’t leave their homes.

“This adjustment is a sign of progress, but our work is not yet done,” said Dr. Matt Willis, the county’s public health officer. “If we can vaccinate another 10 or 15% of residents, it will pay dividends for our community.”

LA County Public Health Director Barbara Ferrer said Thursday that the large-capacity vaccinatio­n sites were set up when there was a scarcity of supply.

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