Baltimore Sun

Hogan’s remark draws outrage

Claims Baltimore has gotten more vaccines than it’s ‘entitled to’

- By Alex Mann

At a news conference touting his administra­tion’s new mass COVID-19 vaccinatio­n site in Baltimore, Maryland Gov. Larry Hogan said his state’s largest city had been getting more doses of immunizati­ons than it was “entitled to,” highlighti­ng familiar tension between the state and the city that drew fresh ire from some leaders.

Hogan was asked Thursday by a reporter whether a portion of the shares Maryland was sending to the mass vaccinatio­n clinic at M&T Bank Stadium, which is open to any eligible person in the state, would be set aside for Baltimore residents — as Maryland officials opted to do with the mass vaccinatio­n site at Six Flags in Prince George’s County.

The governor said the Maryland Department of Health’s Vaccine Equity Task Force likely would look into it, though “as of last week, Baltimore City had gotten far more than they really were entitled to.”

In an interview Friday, Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott said he’d advocated for doses to be set aside from the mass vaccinatio­n site for city residents, like at Six Flags. He said he asked for 50% of the doses to be reserved for Baltimore residents, but he was open to negotiate.

Scott said he was dismayed by Hogan’s comments, which he described as “one of the most ridiculous things that I’ve ever heard.”

“We do not have equitable access to vaccine doses. I think our citizens in Baltimore know a dog whistle when they see one,” Scott said. “Baltimorea­ns are Marylander­s who both are entitled to and deserve vaccine.”

Scott added that his health department has been forced to work around a “broken” state sign-up system that relies heavily on internet access and puts vulnerable residents at a disadvanta­ge. He said the state has ignored such barriers.

Michael Ricci, a spokesman for the governor, defended Hogan and the state’s role in doling out the vaccine in Baltimore. He said in a Friday afternoon email the “governor’s informatio­n is sound. The city

received 14,000 vaccines for this week.”

“The state plays a major role in establishi­ng partnershi­ps and working with providers to ensure equitable access,” Ricci said. “For example, the Vaccine Equity Task Force is holding a clinic this afternoon at Sacred Heart of Jesus Christ in partnershi­p with Hopkins.”

But how Baltimore’s share of the state’s vaccine allocation stacks up to other jurisdicti­ons is difficult to discern, as Hogan’s administra­tion has refused to release comprehens­ive data about how many doses each county and each provider within those jurisdicti­ons have gotten from the time vaccines first arrived in the state in mid-December.

It’s likely many doses flowed through Baltimore in the earliest stages of the state’s rollout, which focused on vaccinatin­g frontline health care workers. The city is home to about a dozen hospitals, including the large Johns Hopkins Hospital and University of Maryland Medical Center.

Roughly 11.1% of Baltimore residents have received a preliminar­y immunizati­on, while about 6.4% have received both doses required to protect against severe illness. Like Prince George’s County, Baltimore’s population is predominan­tly Black. Statewide, white residents have received roughly four times as many vaccine doses as Black people.

Dr. Joshua M. Sharfstein, vice dean in the Johns Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health, called Hogan’s statement “baffling” considerin­g that “there’s a gap in city residents getting vaccinated.” While hospitals are critical vaccinator, Sharfstein said, the state might need to reconsider how it accounts for the doses it sends them.

“Because the hospital system serves the whole state, it wouldn’t make sense to me to count the hospital allocation­s against the specific counties where the hospitals are located,” said Sharfstein, who was once Baltimore health commission­er. “Doing so would disadvanta­ge the counties that have the most hospitals, particular­ly Baltimore City.”

In his remarks Thursday, Hogan said there were now two mass vaccinatio­n clinics in Baltimore, the other located at the Convention Center, and cited vaccine reluctance in some city communitie­s. He also called into question the volume of vaccines administer­ed by the Baltimore City Health Department, though Hogan’s administra­tion decides how many doses each local health department gets.

“The city health department is only doing 14% of the shots here in the city,” Hogan said. “We’re doing, with other partners, 86% of the effort.”

Scott was frustrated that Hogan would disparage his health department. He said he spoke with the governor about allowing the city’s health department to reallocate some of its doses to other providers in the city. So it was misleading for the governor to “turn around and say ‘Oh, well they’re only doing this,’” Scott said. “You can’t speak out of both sides.”

Hogan has “poked his finger in the city’s eye” before, said Matthew Crenson, professor emeritus of political science at the Johns Hopkins University. For example, Hogan when he first took office. That’s just the latest example of a disjointed relationsh­ip between the city and state dating to a time when differing economies — grain in Baltimore, tobacco throughout the rest of state — fueled friction, he said.

“This is an old story,” Crenson said. “The city and the state, there’s always been a tension there, going all the way back to the 18th century.”

Baltimore Health Commission­er Dr. Letitia Dzirasa explained in a statement Thursday how her department planned to reallocate vaccines to other providers in the city for the first week of March, an effort she said was intended to “prioritize our most vulnerable population­s” amidst a constraine­d supply.

The Baltimore City Health Department expects to get 3,500 doses next week, according to a news release.

It plans to use 500 doses itself at a closed “point of distributi­on site” at Baltimore City Community College, while it was giving 700 doses to city hospitals to vaccinate educators, 1,500 doses to point of distributi­on sites where hospitals were to vaccinate older adults and 800 for mobile vaccinatio­n clinics.

The Maryland Department of Health released the most comprehens­ive look at the state’s allocation plan to state senators on the Vaccine Oversight Workgroup nearly two weeks ago.

The figures included details about allocation­s in four jurisdicti­ons over two weeks in February.

It showed that Baltimore, which has about 593,000 residents, got 10,350 doses over the two weeks beginning Feb. 8 and ending Feb. 21.Those doses were divided among the city health department, hospitals, retail pharmacies, federally qualified health centers and large health care providers

During the same window, Howard County, which has about 326,000 residents, got about 5,200 doses total spread out among its health department, hospitals and retail pharmacies. Montgomery County, the most populated jurisdicti­on in the state with 1.05 million people, received 22,875 doses spread among various providers. With a population of 909,000, the second biggest population in Maryland, Prince George’s County’s range of providers received a total of 19,600 immunizati­ons.

Those four counties are the only jurisdicti­ons the state health department has provided detailed allocation data for, though just for that two-week period.

Local and legislativ­e leaders have called for greater transparen­cy about how the state is divvying up its share of vaccines. Meanwhile, tensions boiled over about Hogan’s relationsh­ip with the city.

State Del. Marlon Amprey, a recently appointed Baltimore Democrat, in a tweet doubted many of the doses allocated to the city were being shot into the arms of Baltimore residents.

Hogan’s appearance at M&T Bank Stadium was “performati­ve politics,” and doesn’t address equity issues in the vaccine rollout, Amprey said in an interview.

For Amprey, Hogan’s appearance recalled images from 2017 of former President Donald Trump tossing paper towel rolls into a crowd of hurricane survivors in Puerto Rico.

“He shows up in Baltimore and says that he does things for Baltimore just to say he

 ?? KENNETH K. LAM/ BALTIMORE SUN ?? Gov. Larry Hogan speaks with news media outside M&T Bank Stadium.
KENNETH K. LAM/ BALTIMORE SUN Gov. Larry Hogan speaks with news media outside M&T Bank Stadium.

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