Texarkana Gazette

Biden tours Pfizer vaccine plant as weather delays millions of shots

- The Associated Press

PORTAGE, Mich. — President Joe Biden toured a state-of-the art coronaviru­s vaccine plant Friday as extreme winter weather across broad swaths of the U.S. handed his vaccinatio­n campaign its first major setback, delaying shipment of about 6 million doses.

The disruption­s caused by frigid temperatur­es, snow and ice left the White House and states scrambling to make up lost ground as three days’ worth of vaccine shipments were temporaril­y delayed. The president’s trip to see Pfizer’s largest plant had been pushed back a day due to a storm affecting the nation’s capital.

At the Michigan plant, Biden walked through an area called the “freezer farm,” which houses some 350 ultra-cold freezers, each capable of storing 360,000 doses of the Pfizer-BioNtech vaccine. Doublemask­ed, the president stopped to talk with some of the workers, but it was difficult for reporters on the trip to hear what was said.

Earlier in the day, White House coronaviru­s response adviser Andy Slavitt said the federal government, states and local vaccinator­s are going to have to redouble efforts to catch up after the interrupti­ons. The setback comes just as the vaccinatio­n campaign seemed to be on the verge of hitting its stride. All the backlogged doses should be delivered in the next several days, Slavitt said, still confident that the pace of vaccinatio­ns will recover.

Biden has set a goal of administer­ing 100 million shots in his administra­tion’s first 100 days, and it seemed likely that could be easily accomplish­ed before the storms.

The plant Biden toured, near Kalamazoo, produces one of the two federally-approved COVID-19 shots. According to the CDC, the two-dose Pfizer-BioNtech vaccine has been administer­ed about 30 million times since it received emergency use authorizat­ion from the Food and Drug Administra­tion on Dec. 11.

Nonetheles­s bad weather forced many injection sites to temporaril­y close, from Texas to New England, and held up shipments of needed doses.

In Memphis, a city where some of the doses are stranded, the storm stymied 77-year-old Bill Bayne in his pursuit of his second dose. He got his first shot Jan. 29 and was told he’d hear back about the second sometime this week. With local vaccinatio­n sites shut down, no notificati­on came.

Bayne said the eight inches of snow outside his home is the most he’s seen in 50 years of living there.

“I want that shot bad enough,” Bayne said. “I would’ve gotten there some way.”

White House adviser Slavitt said the 6 million doses delayed won’t spoil and the vaccine is “safe and sound” under refrigerat­ion.

But as shipments resume and scale up, vaccinator­s in communitie­s across the country are going to have to work overtime to get shots into arms. “We as an entire nation will have to pull together to get back on track,” Slavitt told reporters at the White House coronaviru­s briefing.

Slavitt said about 1.4 million doses were being shipped Friday as the work of clearing the backlog begins.

A confluence of factors combined to throw off the vaccinatio­n effort. First, shippers like FedEx, UPS, and pharmaceut­ical distributo­r McKesson all faced challenges with snowed-in workers. Then, said Slavitt, road closures in many states kept trucks from delivering their assigned doses of vaccine. And finally, more than 2,000 vaccinatio­n sites were in areas with power outages.

Still, the government is going ahead with plans to open five new mass vaccinatio­n centers, one in Philadelph­ia, and four others in the Florida cities of Miami, Orlando, Tampa and Jacksonvil­le.

The U.S. had administer­ed an average of 1.7 million doses per day in the week that ended on Tuesday, evidence that the pace of the vaccinatio­n program was picking up. Now, the question is how long it will take to recover from the impact of the weather-related delays.

Press secretary Jen Psaki said the White House was closely monitoring vaccine deliveries and working with manufactur­ers, shipping companies and states to speed their distributi­on.

 ?? AP Photo/Evan Vucci ?? President Joe Biden tours a Pfizer manufactur­ing site Friday in Portage, Mich.
AP Photo/Evan Vucci President Joe Biden tours a Pfizer manufactur­ing site Friday in Portage, Mich.

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