The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Vaccinatio­n sites added as state's rate lags

Kemp says teachers will be at top of list for new vaccine, disputes reports of slow rollout.

- By Greg Bluestein gbluestein@ajc.com

Bolstered by an expected influx of coronaviru­s vaccine supply, Gov. Brian Kemp expanded the number of mass vaccinatio­n centers on Wednesday and said doses of a newly approved vaccine would be prioritize­d for teachers as the state scrambles to improve a rock-bottom inoculatio­n rate.

The governor announced that five new centers will open in Bartow, Chatham, Muscogee, Ware and Washington counties on March 17, part of a race to inoculate as many Georgians as possible before new, more contagious COVID-19 variants take hold.

The newsites joinexisti­ng centers near Albany, Atlanta, Macon and northeast Georgia, part of a budding infrastruc­ture ahead of Monday’s expansion. That’s when the state will allow teachers, school staffers, day care workers, adults with intellectu­al disabiliti­es and parents of children with “complex medical conditions” to receive the vaccine.

Federal data from the Atlanta-based U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention shows

Georgia lags behind every other state in the U.S. in the pace of vaccinatio­n, and some public health experts say Kemp isn’t acting aggressive­ly enough to effectivel­y distribute the doses.

The governor pushed back on the data, saying the state’s lagging pace in administer­ing first doses of the vaccine was because of “intense demand” from health care workers and Georgians over 65 who are in need of their second shots.

He also said nearly 60% of Georgia’s seniors have received at least one vaccine dose, compared with a national average of 49% — a reflection, the governor said, of the state’s focus on the most vulnerable Georgians.

“The media will always focus on the worst number, not the number that matters. I think that’s what’s happening in this case,” he said, adding that state figures show a higher rate of inoculatio­n than the CDC data reflects. “We’ve got to target the population that’s hit the hardest, and you’re not seeing that on any site.”

The governor’s critics say he was too hesitant to expand the vaccine pool to Georgia’s educators and too slow to open a broad network of mass vaccinatio­n sites. State Rep. Jasmine Clark, a Democrat and microbiolo­gist, said “extremely frustrated” is the best way to define her reaction.

“The governor of Georgia has effectivel­y made the state being No. 1 for business his calling card while being completely complacent with Georgia being last in everything else,” Clark said.

Goal of ‘full time’ classes

The expansion to include teachers and others will add an estimated 1 million Georgians to the pool of eligibilit­y at a time when the state’s limited vaccine supply is expected to grow. Regulators on Saturday approved Johnson & Johnson’s one-dose vaccine, and rival drugmaker Merck will help produce the shot, expanding the nation’s stockpile.

President Joe Biden said Tuesday that the U.S. was on track to have enough vaccine in supply for “every adult in America by the end of May” — two months earlier than expected — as he directed states to prioritize vaccinatin­g teachers so more students can return to in-person learning.

Despite the optimistic outlook, the increase in doses underscore­s the challenges faced by state health officials to actually get the surge of supply into the arms of Georgians.

More than 2.1 million vaccine doses have been administer­ed in Georgia, but the supply still can’t keep up with the demand. Still, Georgia’s vaccine capacity is slowly growing: The state administer­ed nearly 350,000 vaccinatio­ns in the most recent seven-day stretch. And more than 18,000 vaccinatio­ns were completed during the first week at the four state-operated sites.

Kemp said the state has given at least one dose to more than 860,000 Georgians who are 65 and older — a group that accounts for roughly 77% of the state’s COVID-19 deaths.

The state expects to receive some 83,000 doses of the Johnson & Johnson vaccine this week, and Kemp said Georgia will prioritize the shots for educators to hasten a “full five-days-a-week return to the classroom.”

Most of Georgia’s public school

districts have resumed in-person learning, but several — including Clayton and Dekalb counties — have yet to do so.

Kemp’s frustratio­n at the holdouts has grown in recent weeks, though he’s stopped short of threatenin­g to use his executive powers to force them to restart in-person instructio­n.

“As I have said many times before: Every student belongs in the classroom five days a week. Full time. As soon as possible,” Kemp said. “That is my expectatio­n moving forward, and we look forward to partnering with local districts to ensure that happens quickly.”

‘The end of the tunnel’

The expansion of the state’s vaccine eligibilit­y list also drew frustratio­n among those who still aren’t part of the pool, including those under 65 with medically fragile conditions, and professors and others in the state’s higher education system.

Most professors are working on campus and are worried about being infected by students

since federal data has shown high COVID-19 rates among young adults, said Matt Boedy, a University of North Georgia professor.

“The return to a normal college environmen­t would be welcomed by all faculty,” said Boedy, who is also president of the Georgia Conference of the American Associatio­n of University Professors. “But without vaccines for all — staff and students — we remain vulnerable to COVID.”

The governor said he would announce within days that he’ll add more Georgians to the vaccine priority list, but he stressed that demand still outstrips supply. He also said he’s not yet ready to loosen coronaviru­s restrictio­ns, as the governor of Texas did this week. “We can’t let our guard down. We’ve got to keep doing this for another month or two, to get closer to true herd immunity,” Kemp said. “I just feel like we’re starting to see the light at the end of the tunnel.”

 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC ?? Bolstered by an expected influx of supply, Gov. Brian Kemp announces Wednesday that state coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns will expand to sites in Bartow, Chatham, Muscogee, Ware and Washington counties on March 17.
JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC Bolstered by an expected influx of supply, Gov. Brian Kemp announces Wednesday that state coronaviru­s vaccinatio­ns will expand to sites in Bartow, Chatham, Muscogee, Ware and Washington counties on March 17.
 ?? JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC ?? Gov. Brian Kemp, announcing the expanded state vaccine sites at the Capitol, says Georgia’s lagging pace in administer­ing first doses was because of “intense demand” from health care workers and Georgians over 65 who are in need of second shots.
JENNI GIRTMAN FOR THE AJC Gov. Brian Kemp, announcing the expanded state vaccine sites at the Capitol, says Georgia’s lagging pace in administer­ing first doses was because of “intense demand” from health care workers and Georgians over 65 who are in need of second shots.

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