The Daily Press

As school workers get vaccine, Wolf puts police, others next

- By Mark Scolforo Associate Press

HARRISBURG, Pa. (AP) — Police officers, firefighte­rs and grocery workers will start getting the single dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine in about two weeks, as the current effort to immunize school workers wraps up, Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf said Friday.

Wolf also said he was confident that Pennsylvan­ia will meet President Joe Biden's directive to make everyone eligible for a vaccine by May 1.

“We can meet that timeline,” Wolf said, appearing by video with lawmakers on a vaccine task force. "We want to get everybody vaccinated as quickly and fairly as possible. That’s what we’re trying to do here.”

Sen. Ryan Aument, R-Lancaster, a vaccine task force member, said the plans mean “a spring of hope is upon us.”

“Much work remains,” Aument said. “But we are turning the corner and dramatical­ly improving the process.”

The group getting special priority after teachers includes police, prison staff, grocery workers, volunteer and profession­al firefighte­rs, meat processors and farm workers.

Wolf said planners have to figure out how those doses will be administer­ed, suggesting it could take many forms.

Wolf said all who currently qualify for the vaccine, the socalled “1A” group that includes older people and those whose medical conditions put them at risk, should be able to get an appointmen­t for their first shot by month's end.

The administra­tion says nearly 1 million Pennsylvan­ians over 65 have received at least one dose of a COVID-19 vaccine. Wolf said the state is currently averaging some 70,000 vaccines a day, and was encouraged that more than 114,000 were vaccinated in Pennsylvan­ia on Thursday.

Some of the Johnson & Johnson vaccines will go to regional clinics starting in April. The shape and form of those clinics is a work in progress, and Wolf said the County Commission­ers Associatio­n of Pennsylvan­ia is involved.

Pennsylvan­ia’s program to vaccinate teachers and other school workers, starting in the youngest grades, immunized more than 6,500 people in its first days, officials said.

The Wolf administra­tion said 10 of the school clinics are up and running. Ten more were expected to become operationa­l on Friday and the other eight should begin over the coming weekend. They are organized around the state’s regional schools network known as intermedia­te units.

In this first round, the clinics are administer­ing the state’s allocation of the Johnson & Johnson vaccines to school employees in kindergart­en through third grade, as well as those working with students with disabiliti­es and students learning to speak English.

Some 450 of Pennsylvan­ia’s 500 school districts are conducting at least some brick-and-mortar instructio­n, according to state data. About 1.3 million students are in those districts, while 440,000 students are in districts with only virtual instructio­n.

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