Miami Herald

Marlins Park vaccinatio­ns to start next week, but Miami wants residency restrictio­n

- BY MARTIN VASSOLO, JOEY FLECHAS, DOUGLAS HANKS AND SAMANTHA J. GROSS mvassolo@miamiheral­d.com jflechas@miamiheral­d.com dhanks@miamiheral­d.com sgross@miamiheral­d.com Joey Flechas: 305-376-3602, @joeflech; Martin Vassolo: 305-376-2071, martindvas­solo; Dougl

Miami-Dade County residents could start receiving vaccinatio­ns for COVID-19 at Marlins Park as soon as Wednesday — but Miami Mayor Francis Suarez wants to reserve doses only for those who live inside city limits under a policy he’s calling “Miami First.”

Even though federal regulation­s and guidance from emergency managers agree that there cannot be residency requiremen­ts for vaccines, Suarez wants to keep vaccines for people who live inside city limits. He presented a resolution at Thursday’s Miami commission meeting requesting that the city manager and attorney “take all legal steps necessary to prevent nonresiden­ts of the city of Miami from receiving vaccines prior to the elderly and vulnerable population of our community and the general population of our city.”

Regardless of residency, under orders from Gov. Ron DeSantis, Florida’s policy limits vaccinatio­ns to people 65 and over, rescue and healthcare workers, and people hospitals determine have conditions severe enough to receive early vaccinatio­ns.

The state’s top emergency management official came out firmly against residency restrictio­ns Thursday during a House Pandemic and Public Emergencie­s Committee meeting in Tallahasse­e.

“You can’t do that,” said state Emergency Management Director Jared Moskowitz. “We got a dozenplus fiscally constraine­d counties. People are going to have to cross county

lines. We have transient population­s here in the state. We can’t do that sort of stuff. It will have major implicatio­ns down the road.”

With a fight over a residency mandate brewing, a slew of government agencies are planning to move coronaviru­s testing at Marlins Park to one of the ballpark’s parking garages while vaccinatio­ns are set up on the surface lot west of the stadium. According to a plan proposed by Miami’s fire department, officials say they could vaccinate up to 2,240 people each day, but the supply is not expected to meet the demand.

Miami-Dade County officials confirmed on Thursday that Marlins Park is scheduled to receive up to 7,000 doses next week while other county-run sites may close due to a

slowdown in federal vaccine shipments.

The lack of supplies from the federal government is frustratin­g administra­tors from Tallahasse­e to Miami-Dade County government. Miami-Dade has reserved a portion of its vaccine supplies for county employees 65 and over, who have their own reservatio­ns portal for appointmen­ts and go to a vaccinatio­n site not open to the public.

Most of Miami-Dade’s vaccine supplies have been made available to the public by appointmen­t on a website, miamidade.gov/vaccine, that typically takes reservatio­ns for 15 or 20 minutes before running out of vaccinatio­n slots.

During a presentati­on for Miami commission­ers, Miami Fire Chief Joseph Zahralban said state officials

on Thursday morning requested preparatio­ns to open the Marlins Park site Wednesday, with a goal of administer­ing about 1,000 vaccines per day.

CREATING VACCINE RESTRICTIO­NS

At Miami City Hall, commission­ers unanimousl­y instructed the fire department to create a new plan for vaccinatin­g only city residents.

“If it’s a city of Miami program, let’s make it a city of Miami program for city of Miami residents,” Alex Díaz de la Portilla said. “Not for people from other parts of the county, not for people from other parts of the world. We are not the government of the world. We’re the government of the city of Miami. It should be for our residents, within the governor’s guidelines of 65 and

over.”

Putting limits on eligibilit­y is expected to come with a price for the city, according to Zahralban, because the state and county could withhold personnel for sites that restrict vaccines to city residents. The fire chief is expected to deliver a new plan, with a budget, by Tuesday morning.

Suarez’s promotion of a city-only vaccinatio­n program occurred at the same time Miami-Dade commission­ers were meeting for a county vaccine briefing, where county administra­tors shot down the idea.

Frank Rollason, MiamiDade’s emergency director, said federal rules bar residency restrictio­ns.

“Any comers are to get vaccinated,” he said. “That’s the direction.”

DEBATE OVER PLAN

Eileen Higgins, a county commission­er whose district includes parts of Miami, called it a bad idea to let cities reserve vaccine doses for their residents.

“We shouldn’t allow municipal borders to limit a person’s access to lifesaving vaccines based on which side of the street they live on,” she said.

Suarez, who is in an election year, later gave his approach a slogan on Twitter: “MIAMI FIRST.”

His proposal would aim to curb so-called vaccine tourism, or foreigners who travel to Miami to receive the vaccine. Miami’s proximity to Latin America has made it attractive for foreigners with little confidence in the vaccinatio­n efforts of their home countries.

“Miami is an internatio­nal city,” Suarez said.

“We’re seeing a lot of highprofil­e people who are, in effect, saying that they got priority over our residents.”

Suarez said he doesn’t know if it’s legal to limit vaccinatio­ns to Miami residents only, but he argued the distributi­on of federal aid during the pandemic should be a precedent.

“When we received federal funding for COVID, we were only allowed to administer it in the city of Miami,” he said. “So there are federal requiremen­ts that limit us to spending city resources on city residents. It’s very possible that if we’re going to be getting reimbursem­ent for city expenses, we have to spend it on city residents.”

 ?? AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com ?? Miami Mayor Francis Suarez presented a resolution Thursday that would give city residents priority in receiving COVID-19 vaccines. Meanwhile, Florida’s top emergency management official came out firmly against residency restrictio­ns Thursday.
AL DIAZ adiaz@miamiheral­d.com Miami Mayor Francis Suarez presented a resolution Thursday that would give city residents priority in receiving COVID-19 vaccines. Meanwhile, Florida’s top emergency management official came out firmly against residency restrictio­ns Thursday.

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