The Day

States rapidly expand vaccine access as supplies surge

- By MARK PRATT and TAMMY WEBBER

Buoyed by a surge in vaccine shipments, states and cities are rapidly expanding eligibilit­y for COVID-19 shots to teachers, Americans age 50 and over and others as the U.S. races to beat back the disease and reopen businesses and schools.

Indiana and Michigan will begin vaccinatin­g those 50 and over, while Arizona and Connecticu­t have thrown open the line to those who are at least 55. Pennsylvan­ia and Wisconsin are reserving the first doses of the new one-shot vaccine from Johnson & Johnson for teachers. And in Detroit, factory workers can get vaccinated starting this week, regardless of age.

Giving the vaccine to teachers and other school staff “will help protect our communitie­s,” Pennsylvan­ia Gov. Tom Wolf said. “It’s going to take burdens off our parents and families. It’s going to make our schools get back to the business of teaching our kids.”

Until now, the vaccinatio­n campaign against the outbreak that’s killed over a half-million Americans has concentrat­ed mostly on health workers and senior citizens.

Around the U.S., politician­s and school administra­tors have been pushing hard in recent weeks to reopen classrooms to stop students from falling behind and enable more parents to go back to work. But teachers have resisted returning without getting vaccinated.

The Department of Health and Human Services has ordered all states to make teachers, school staff, bus drivers and child care workers eligible for shots. That’s a major shift for the Biden administra­tion, which controls access to COVID-19 vaccines but previously allowed states to set their own guidelines.

Jody Mackey, 46, a middle-school digital media and history teacher in Traverse City, Mich. — where students have attended mostly in person since September — received her second dose nearly two weeks ago after teachers in her district were designated essential workers.

Before that, she kept her classroom windows open and used space heaters.

“If you want schools to be successful and safe and you want your teachers to have their heads in the game, get them the vaccinatio­n,” she said. “Putting teachers in a situation where they feel scared all the time, where they’re going to want to avoid their kids, how is that good for kids or teachers?”

“If you want schools to be successful and safe and you want your teachers to have their heads in the game, get them the vaccinatio­n.”

JODY MACKEY, 46, A MIDDLE-SCHOOL TEACHER IN TRAVERSE CITY, MICH.

 ?? MARK LENNIHAN AP PHOTO ?? Pharmacist Jack Kann, center, delivers a case of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine at South Shore University Hospital on Wednesday in Bay Shore, N.Y. Cities and states are rapidly expanding access to vaccines as the nation races to head off a resurgence in coronaviru­s infections and reopen schools and businesses battered by the pandemic.
MARK LENNIHAN AP PHOTO Pharmacist Jack Kann, center, delivers a case of the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine at South Shore University Hospital on Wednesday in Bay Shore, N.Y. Cities and states are rapidly expanding access to vaccines as the nation races to head off a resurgence in coronaviru­s infections and reopen schools and businesses battered by the pandemic.

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