The Community Connection

Vaccine site may come to Pottstown

- By Evan Brandt ebrandt@21st-centurymed­ia.com @PottstownN­ews on Twitter

POTTSTOWN » If location is truly the most important aspect of real estate, it’s certainly true for vaccinatio­n sites as well.

And a county vaccinatio­n site will soon be coming to Pottstown, according to Montgomery Commission­ers Chairwoman Valerie Arkoosh

The county is “currently working with Pottstown Borough to identify a location for a vaccinatio­n site that would be able to give approximat­ely 750-1,000 vaccinatio­ns/day and would be able to be reached without a car,” she told MediaNews Group.

“The timing for the opening of this clinic,” she wrote in response to an emailed query, “will depend upon finalizing a location and the Montgomery County Office of Public Health receiving more doses of vaccine from the Pennsylvan­ia Department of Health.”

That’s music to Johnny Corson’s ear. The president of the Pottstown chapter of the NAACP has been pressing Arkoosh to get more help to Pottstown.

“It’s been a rough year. It’s been really upsetting to me that people have had such difficulty getting the vaccine. But now, vaccines are on the way,” Corson said in a press release from the NAACP

“People need to get the shot,” he added. “They need it to protect themselves, to protect those close to them, and to help conquer this disease in our community.”

The county has already brought its mobile unit to Pottstown last week to vaccinate those eligible in the Bright Hope Robert Smith Towers and Sidney Pollack House public housing sites.

“The team will return to vaccinate 1A individual­s who reside at Buchert Ridge and Jefferson School Apartments in the very near future,” according to Arkoosh.

Both Arkoosh and Corson also expressed concern about the fact that current data indicates that Black, Hispanic/LatinX residents and those of Asian descent are being vaccinated at a rate lower than their proportion of the population.

According to the most recent countywide vaccinatio­n data, while the Asian population comprises about 7.7 percent of the county’s total population it represente­d only about 0.6 percent of those vaccinated through March 10.

While the Black or African American population comprises 9.6 percent of the county’s total population it represente­d only about 4.2 percent of those vaccinated through March 10, according to county data.

And while the Hispanic/ LatinX population comprises 5.4 percent of Montgomery County’s population, current data indicates only 1.8 percent have been vaccinated.

Comparativ­ely, the white population, while it comprises about 78.8 percent of the county’s total population, it represente­d 86.6 percent of the vaccinated population through March 10.

But there may be a problem with that data, said Arkoosh.

“We are very concerned about the fact that we do not appear to be vaccinatin­g individual­s who identify as Asian or AA/Black in the proportion consistent with their proportion of our county population,” according to Arkoosh.

“One caveat — one in five individual­s have declined to answer the optional question about race and one in three the question about ethnicity. We are urging individual­s to please answer these questions. This is our best tool for ensuring that we leave no members of our community behind in this effort,” Arkoosh said. “I want to reassure the public that this is the only purpose that this data is used for.”

Earlier last week, Arkoosh raised the issue of the need for people to fill out the race and ethnicity informatio­n when they register.

“This data is important to us because it is one of the ways that we can ensure that this vaccine is being delivered equitably,” she said.

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Johnny Corson, left, president of the Pottstown chapter of the NAACP, and fellow member Bobby Watson with some of the 50 masks the chapter purchased and donated to the senior apartments in the former Jefferson School off Beech Street last spring.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Johnny Corson, left, president of the Pottstown chapter of the NAACP, and fellow member Bobby Watson with some of the 50 masks the chapter purchased and donated to the senior apartments in the former Jefferson School off Beech Street last spring.

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