The Mercury News

U.S. tribe shares vaccine with relatives, neighbors in Canada

-

BABB, MONT. >> On a cloudy spring day, hundreds lined up in their cars on the Canadian side of the border crossing that separates Alberta and Montana. They had driven for hours and camped out in their vehicles in hopes of receiving the season’s hottest commodity — a COVID-19 vaccine — from a Native American tribe that was giving out its excess doses.

The Blackfeet tribe in northern Montana provided about 1,000 surplus vaccines last month to its First Nations relatives and others from across the border, in an illustrati­on of the disparity in speed at which the United States and Canada are distributi­ng doses. While more than 30% of adults in the U.S. are fully vaccinated, in Canada that figure is about 3%.

Among those who received the vaccine at the Piegan-Carway border crossing were Sherry Cross Child and Shane Little Bear, of Stand Off, about 30 miles north of the border.

They recited a prayer in the Blackfoot language before nurses began administer­ing shots, with Chief Mountain — sacred to the Blackfoot people — rising in the distance. The prayer was dedicated to people seeking refuge from the virus, Cross Child said.

Cross Child and her husband have family and friends in Montana but have not been able to visit them since the border closed last spring to all but essential travel.

“It’s been stressful because we had some deaths in the family, and they couldn’t come,” she said. “Just for the support – they rely on us, and we rely on them. It’s been tough.”

More than 95% of the Blackfeet reser vation’s roughly 10,000 residents who are eligible for the vaccine are fully immunized, after the state prioritize­d Native American communitie­s — among the most vulnerable U.S. population­s — in the early stages of its vaccinatio­n campaign.

The tribe received vaccine allotments both from the Montana health department and the federal Indian Health Service, leaving some doses unused. With an expiration date fast approachin­g, it turned to other nations in the Blackfoot Confederac­y, which includes the Blackfeet and three tribes in southern Alberta that share a language and culture.

“The idea was to get to our brothers and sisters that live in Canada,” said Robert DesRosier, emergency services manager for the Blackfeet tribe. “And then the question came up – what if a nontribal member wants a vaccine? Well, this is about saving lives. We’re not going to turn anybody away.”

The tribe distribute­d the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines over four days in late April at the remote Piegan Port of Entry, amid a backdrop of rolling grasslands to the east and Glacier National Park’s snow-covered peaks to the west.

 ?? IRIS SAMUELS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Sherry Cross Child, a Canadian resident of Stand Off, Alberta, receives a COVID-19 vaccine at the PieganCarw­ay border crossing near Babb, Montana.
IRIS SAMUELS — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Sherry Cross Child, a Canadian resident of Stand Off, Alberta, receives a COVID-19 vaccine at the PieganCarw­ay border crossing near Babb, Montana.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States