Los Angeles Times

L.A.’s young and healthy get vaccine in Bakersfiel­d

- By Laura J. Nelson

BAKERSFIEL­D — As soon as Justin Perez left the vaccinatio­n clinic, his phone buzzed with a text message.

A former co-worker had heard a hot rumor about a clinic where anyone, even young people like them, could get a COVID-19 vaccine. The clinic was in Bakersfiel­d.

“I am in Bakersfiel­d,” texted Perez, a 35-year-old video designer from Sherman Oaks, confirming the rumor. “I got injected 20 minutes ago.”

Cal State Bakersfiel­d has been the go-to vaccinatio­n site for the young and the healthy from Los Angeles County for more than a week, ever since word spread that the facility had more doses than patients — thousands more — and no restrictio­ns on age, eligibilit­y or county of residency. Some vaccine seekers have been writers, engineers and Hollywood actors, who said the site was welcoming Angelenos with open arms.

Thousands of Southern California residents in recent days have headed over the Grapevine and into the Central Valley. By Monday night, “Bakersfiel­d” was trending on Twitter, spurred by a wave of vaccine hunters who are young, healthy and have time to take a four-hour round-trip road trip. Though many will be eligible for the shot at home in a week or so, there’s no guarantee that appointmen­ts will be available right away.

Bakersfiel­d’s open-door policy felt slightly surreal to some patients, especially compared to L.A. County’s busy, strict vaccine clinics. Some describe whirlwind days, waking up assuming they would have to wait weeks to get vaccinated, then, after seeing a stream of gleeful social media posts, deciding on a whim to drive up the 5 Freeway and getting the shot two hours later.

“The whole way there, and the whole way back, my friend and I were kind of in a daze,” said Julie Greiner, 25, a comedy writer from Glendale who got ice cream to celebrate her vaccinatio­n. “We were like, did this really happen?”

The site’s excess capacity is due at least in part to a relatively high rate of vaccine hesitancy in Kern County, including among evangelica­l Christians and low-income residents of color, according to officials at Kaiser Permanente, which is helping to run the clinic. Additional­ly, the county skews young: About 11% of those in Kern County are 65 or older, meaning that many, perhaps the majority, of residents became eligible for vaccinatio­n only in the last few weeks.

About 24% of people living in Kern County have received at least one dose, compared with 33% of residents statewide, according to the Los Angeles Times vaccine tracker.

Bakersfiel­d officials say it’s true the site is vaccinatin­g everyone 16 and older. But they stopped short of encouragin­g out-of-town visitors, cautioning that the clinic is meant to serve Kern County residents, and the appointmen­t system is reserved for locals.

When officials were planning the site, the idea of people arriving from other counties “didn’t really cross our minds,” said David Womack, senior vice president of Kaiser Permanente in Kern County. But word spread quickly. By the third day, staff had noticed out-of-county visitors. Now, nurses are seeing “a few hundred” Southern California patients per day, he said.

“We have the capacity, we have the vaccine — it would be a crime to turn people away,” Womack said. “We want to get shots in arms.”

About two-thirds of patients do not have appointmen­ts, Womack said. The walk-in policy, a rarity for mega-sites, is designed to improve vaccine access for seniors and others who’ve struggled with the state’s appointmen­t software.

The site opened March 26. During its first week, about 900 people were vaccinated per day, less than 20% of the 5,400-shot capacity. About 2,500 people were vaccinated Monday, and the site was on track Tuesday to break that record, Womack said.

The site’s popularity exploded last weekend, when actor Wil Wheaton, known for his role in “Star Trek: The Next Generation,” told his 1.1 million Instagram followers that he had visited. After he got a Pfizer-BioNTech jab, he wrote, he “cried a little bit” with relief.

“It’s so quick and easy, and you aren’t jumping the line or taking a jab away from someone,” Wheaton, 48, said. Once he arrived at the site, he said, the process took 40 minutes.

Womack cautioned that the clinic may start limiting walk-up appointmen­ts, or restrictin­g them to certain hours of the day, because they significan­tly slow the check-in process. He added: “If the day comes when we have to do that, we just ask that people understand.”

Local officials are evaluating levels of vaccine hesitancy among Black residents, Latino immigrants and white evangelica­ls and how to address it, said Kristin Weber, Kaiser’s interim director of public affairs in Kern County. She said the county is working to make the shots available at churches, and community groups are spreading the word about the vaccine.

There are a few people who “believe some really weird stuff,” said Chris Lewis, a constructi­on worker, as he ate a pulled-pork sandwich in his truck outside PorkChop & Bubba’s BBQ near Bakersfiel­d High School. But mostly, he said, his co-workers seem open to the idea of getting vaccinated. Lewis said he planned to get the shot sometime this year but isn’t in a hurry, since he recently had COVID-19.

At the campus vaccine site Tuesday morning, cars with license plate frames from dealership­s in El Monte, Hollywood, Glendale, Alhambra, Carson and Santa Monica were dotted across the parking lot.

As patients walked out, workers whooped, applauded and cheered. One yelled, “Congratula­tions! Tell your friends!” to a couple wearing Dodgers hats as they walked back to their car holding hands.

After he got vaccinated Tuesday, Michael Vargas, 24, stopped for a selfie with a cardboard cutout of infectious disease expert Dr. Anthony Fauci outside the clinic exit, joking: “Is this to scale?”

Vargas, a Bakersfiel­d resident who works in pest control, said he had become eligible recently but had been dreading trying to find an appointmen­t. When a friend who attended Cal State Bakersfiel­d told him he could get vaccinated by walking in, he decided to stop by. He was vaccinated less than an hour later.

The process was so easy that Vargas said he planned to encourage his friends and family to come.

Max Folkman, a 33-yearold writer of video games from West Hollywood, drove up early in the morning with his roommate after seeing success stories spreading on Twitter and Reddit. A few days earlier, a friend had pulled off the 5 Freeway during a drive to Seattle and gotten vaccinated.

Folkman was pleasantly surprised by how smoothly the vaccinatio­n went, he said — and when they walked back to the parking lot, past several workers who were cheering them on, they saw a heron standing next to their car.

“It seemed like a good omen,” Folkman said.

Karla Hernández, 35, who lives in L.A.’s Koreatown, worried that Central Valley residents weren’t getting vaccinated because of misinforma­tion spreading in the community.

She stopped at Los Reyes Market in South Bakersfiel­d after getting vaccinated, before heading back to L.A. She talked to a few employees, asking if they knew about the campus site and reassuring them that the vaccine was safe.

“It’s concerning to me that not enough people from Bakersfiel­d are going,” she said.

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