The Columbus Dispatch

Biden pushes tax credits to help spur vaccinatio­ns

Inoculatio­n pace has slowed over past week

- Zeke Miller

WASHINGTON – The White House is trying to overcome diminishin­g demand for COVID-19 shots by offering businesses a tax incentive to give employees paid leave to get vaccinated. The move comes as the United States is set to meet President Joe Biden’s goal of administer­ing 200 million coronaviru­s doses in his first 100 days in office.

With more than 50% of adults at least partially vaccinated and roughly 28 million vaccine doses being delivered each week, demand has eclipsed supply as the constraini­ng factor to vaccinatio­ns in much of the country.

In a White House speech on Wednesday, Biden acknowledg­ed entering a “new phase” in the federal vaccinatio­n effort that relies on increased outreach to Americans to get their shots, both to protect them and their communitie­s.

“Vaccines can save your own life, but they can also save your grandmothe­r’s life, your co-worker’s life, the grocery store clerk or the delivery person helping you and your neighbors get through the crisis,” Biden said. “That’s why you should get vaccinated.”

Over the past week, the pace of inoculatio­n in the U.S. has slowed slightly. That is partly a reflection of disruption­s from the “pause” in administra­tion of the Johnson & Johnson shot for a safety review, but also of softening interest for vaccines in many places even as eligibilit­y has been opened to all those older than 16.

As the vaccinatio­n program progresses, the administra­tion believes it will only get more difficult to sustain the current pace of about 3 million shots per day.

Roughly 130 million Americans have yet to receive one dose.

Surveys have shown that vaccine hesitancy has declined since the rollout of the shots, but administra­tion officials believe they have to make getting vaccinated easier and more appealing, particular­ly for younger Americans who are less at risk from the virus and do not feel the same urgency to get a shot. That means providing incentives and encouragem­ent to get vaccinated, as well as reducing the friction surroundin­g the vaccinatio­n process.

Biden announced a tax credit for small businesses to provide paid leave for those getting vaccinated or potentiall­y needing to take time off to recover from side effects. Paid for through the $1.9 trillion virus relief package passed last month, the tax change would provide a credit of up to $511 per day, per employee for businesses with fewer than 500 workers to ensure that those workers or businesses don’t suffer a penalty by getting vaccinated.

The White House is urging larger employers, which have more resources, to provide the same benefits to their workers, and educate them about the shots and encourage them to get vaccinated.

“We’re calling on every employer,

large and small, in every state, give employees the time off they need with pay to get vaccinated,” Biden said.

According to the White House, just 43% of working adults have received at least one shot.

As Biden celebrated the vaccine milestone, he faces a different reality in some states.

In Iowa, nearly half of the counties are not accepting new doses of the COVID-19 vaccine from the state’s allotment because demand has fallen off. In Florida, Palm Beach County plans to close mass vaccinatio­n clinics at the end of May with thousands of available vaccine slots unclaimed. In rural West Virginia, a vaccine clinic at a casino/ race track parking garage is opening shots to out-of-state residents to address lagging demand. The hope is that people from Washington, D.C., make the hour’s drive to get vaccinated. In Arizona, a plan collapsed that would have opened a federally run vaccine site in Tucson; demand is slipping and county officials preferred more targeted, mobile locations.

Asked about the dip in vaccinatio­ns, Health and Human Services Secretary Xavier Becerra said “fluctuation is not uncommon” and that “what we want to do is continue to encourage Americans to continue to get vaccinated.”

“The pace of vaccinatio­n isn’t linear,” Becerra said, adding that “we are on a pretty good pace.”

Through its partnershi­p with more than 40,000 retail pharmacies, the White House says more than 90% of Americans now live within 5 miles of a vaccinatio­n site. The administra­tion is encouragin­g state and local efforts to bring vaccines directly to people, whether through initiative­s reaching the homebound or clinics at large employment sites.

Many states have also begun to open

up vaccinatio­n sites to walk-in appointmen­ts, reducing reliance on oftencumbe­rsome reservatio­n systems.

“Providing some incentives for individual­s to get vaccinated is a good idea,” said Lawrence Gostin, a public health law expert at Georgetown University. “It seems like transporta­tion or paid time off makes sense – targeting it to the most vulnerable population­s that are having difficulty accessing the vaccine, because they are essential workers or live in rural areas. Those are the kinds of bottleneck­s stopping widespread coverage, in addition to vaccine hesitancy.”

Maximizing the number of Americans vaccinated in the coming months is critical for the White House, which is aiming to restore a semblance of normalcy around the July Fourth holiday and even more so by the beginning of the next school year.

Administra­tion officials have been careful to avoid predicting when the country will have vaccinated enough people to reach herd immunity – when enough people become immune to a disease to make its spread unlikely. The U.S. is on track to have enough vaccine supply for every adult by the end of May and for every American by July, but administer­ing the shots will be another matter.

With its stockpile secure and demand dropping at home, the president spoke again of sharing excess doses with allies.

Biden said he talked with Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau for about 30 minutes on Wednesday. “We helped a little bit there, we’re going to try to help some more,” Biden said.

He added. “We don’t have enough to be confident to send it abroad now. But I expect we’re going to be able to do that.”

Biden set his goal of 200 million shots last month.

 ?? EVAN VUCCI/AP ?? President Joe Biden acknowledg­ed entering a “new phase” in the federal vaccinatio­n effort during his speech Wednesday.
EVAN VUCCI/AP President Joe Biden acknowledg­ed entering a “new phase” in the federal vaccinatio­n effort during his speech Wednesday.

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