The Middletown Press (Middletown, CT)

Facebook link allowed ineligible residents to sign up for vaccine

- By Jordan Fenster

A link shared on Facebook allowed ineligible residents to make COVID vaccine appointmen­ts, officials confirmed.

“We have learned that a dedicated link that was reserved solely for registerin­g teachers was unfortunat­ely shared online through a number of individual Facebook sites,” said Yale New Haven Health spokesman Vincent Petrini. “We immediatel­y took action and shut down the link and we are reviewing the situation.”

Though he could not say the exact number of appointmen­ts were made, Ohm Deshpande, Yale New Haven Health’s vice president for population health and a physician leader for the provider’s vaccinatio­n efforts, said it was “a small number.”

“I don’t have a hard number yet — we are working on that,” he said Thursday. “The link was intended for educators and got abused. Needless to say it was deactivate­d rapidly.”

Any appointmen­ts made by ineligible residents have been canceled, Petrini said.

Connecticu­t moved to an age-based vaccine rollout last month, with residents aged between 55 and 64 years old eligible to sign up on March 1. People between the ages of 45 and 54 become eligible on March 22, but teachers and other in-school workers of any age became eligible on March 1.

But the intention, according to a press release issued by the state last month, was to administer the vaccine to educators “at dedicated clinics that will be set up specifical­ly for those sectors.”

“We have teacher clinics in most places,” said Fran Rabinowitz, executive director of the Connecticu­t Associatio­n of Public School Superinten­dents. “The issue is that you also can’t restrict teachers from going wherever to get their vaccines.”

Petrini said most school districts are going through local health districts to plan vaccine clinics, but that Yale is working with some.

“Yale New Haven is only working with school districts that have approached us directly and we have been working in full collaborat­ion with local health department­s and the state Department of Public Health,” he said.

He did not say which school district or districts the link was intended for, but Greenwich is among those school districts that are working with Yale to distribute vaccines to school-based personnel, according to the school district.

“We are currently running efficient and safe vaccinatio­n clinics that require extensive logistics,” said Dana Marnane, vice president of public relations at Greenwich Hospital, which is part of th Yale-New Haven system “To continue to best serve our entire community, this was the optimal way to proceed.”

As for how to prevent such breaches in the future, Deshponde said Yale was “working” on the issue

“We have deactivate­d the link,” he said. “We are working on other tech solutions to make it more stringent.”

WASHINGTON — House Democrats passed the most ambitious effort in decades to overhaul policing nationwide, avoiding a potential clash with moderates in their own party who were wary of reigniting the “defund the police” debate they say hurt them during last fall’s election.

Approved 220-212 late Wednesday, the George Floyd Justice in Policing Act is named for the man whose killing by police in Minnesota last Memorial Day sparked demonstrat­ions nationwide. It would ban chokeholds and “qualified immunity” for law enforcemen­t while creating national standards for policing in a bid to bolster accountabi­lity, and was first approved last summer only to stall in the then-Republican controlled Senate. The bill is supported by President Joe Biden.

“My city is not an outlier, but rather an example of the inequaliti­es our country has struggled with for centuries,” said Rep. Ilhan Omar, D-Minn., who represents the Minneapoli­s area near where Floyd died.

Floyd’s family watched the emotional debate from a nearby House office building and said “defunding the police” is not what the legislatio­n is about.

“We just want to be treated equal. We just want to deescalate situations,” said Brandon Williams, Floyd’s nephew. “We want to feel safe when we encounter law enforcemen­t. We’re not asking for anything extra. We’re not asking for anything that we don’t feel is right.”

Democrats hustled to pass the bill a second time, hoping to combat police brutality and institutio­nal racism after the deaths of Floyd, Breonna Taylor and other Black Americans following interactio­ns with law enforcemen­t — images of which were sometimes jarringly captured on video.

But the debate over legislatio­n turned into a political liability for Democrats as Republican­s seized on calls by some activists and progressiv­es to “defund the police” to argue that supporters were intent on slashing police force budgets.

Though this bill doesn’t do that, moderate Democrats said the charge helped drive Democratic defeats in swing districts around the country last November.

“No one ran on ‘defund the police,’ but all you have to do is make that a political weapon,” said Teas Democratic Rep. Henry Cuellar.

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