USA TODAY US Edition

California’s plan does not prioritize prisoners

- Rick Rouan Our fact check work is supported in part by a grant from Facebook.

Shifting plans for distributi­ng COVID-19 vaccines are drawing out new criticism for plans to administer the shots.

In a Facebook post on March 1, comedian and podcaster Adam Carolla took aim at the state of California. “In California the homeless and prisoners are getting the vaccine before taxpayers,” he wrote in the post that about 12,000 users have reacted to. “It sounds like something out of Idiocracy. If that isn’t the most California way of doing things I don’t know what is.”

Advocates have fought for those population­s to be prioritize­d because they live in close quarters, such as homeless shelters, and cannot easily maintain social distance.

While Carolla is correct that California is administer­ing vaccines to those groups, a shift in the state’s distributi­on plan in January no longer gave them priority for the vaccine.

Carolla did not respond to a request for comment.

California’s vaccine distributi­on plan

The first doses of the COVID-19 vaccine arrived in California in mid-December, and the state began vaccinatin­g front-line health care workers soon after.

California’s initial plan for distributi­ng the vaccine prioritize­d health care workers before moving on to those 75 and older and workers the state deemed essential, including teachers, first responders and grocery store clerks.

That first plan also included those experienci­ng homelessne­ss and state prisoners in the second wave. California started vaccinatin­g prisoners on Dec. 22, according to the Los Angeles Times.

However, The Sacramento Bee points out that California’s plan to vaccinate its residents has changed several times since December, and in late January the state adopted a new framework that prioritize­s those 65 and older and those working in agricultur­e and food, education and child care and emergency services in the most recent phase. Starting March 14, the state will vaccinate people between the ages of 16 and 64 who are “at the very highest risk” because of severe health conditions, including cancer, pregnancy, heart conditions and severe obesity.

Prisoners and homeless people would no longer get preference for vaccines under that change, according to The Bee. The new plan doesn’t disqualify prisoners or homeless people from receiving the vaccine if they fall into one of the eligible categories, though. California’s Department of Rehabilita­tion and Correction­s notes on its website that it is prioritizi­ng vaccine distributi­on under the state health department’s guidelines.

As of March 1, 40,905 incarcerat­ed people had been vaccinated, along with 25,626 staff members, according to the department’s website. At that time, the state had 94,586 people in custody and 89,892 in prisons.

“We are prioritizi­ng vaccine distributi­on in a manner that is consistent with CDPH guidelines. It is our intent to offer COVID-19 vaccinatio­ns to all CDCR and CCHCS employees and incarcerat­ed individual­s,” said Liz Gransee, the department’s deputy director of communicat­ions, in an email.

About three of every four people incarcerat­ed in California have either received the first dose of the vaccine or been infected with the virus as of Feb. 8, according to the Los Angeles Times.

Data showing the number of vaccines that have gone to homeless people, though, is harder to find.

“Unfortunat­ely, while there is good data on prison population­s and COVID-19 vaccine administra­tion, we don’t have good data on vaccine administra­tion and people experienci­ng homelessne­ss,” said Barbara DiPietro, senior director of policy for the National Health Care for the Homeless Council, in a prepared statement.

Our rating: Missing context

The claim that California is vaccinatin­g prison inmates and the homeless against COVID-19 before others is MISSING CONTEXT, because without additional informatio­n it could be misleading. While it’s true that the state is administer­ing the vaccine to those population­s, California shifted its vaccine distributi­on plan in January. The new plan does not prioritize those groups.

 ?? POOL PHOTO BY TIMOTHY D. EASLEY ?? The first box containing the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine heads down the conveyor to a waiting transport truck at the McKesson facility in Shepherdsv­ille, Ky., on March 1.
POOL PHOTO BY TIMOTHY D. EASLEY The first box containing the Johnson & Johnson COVID-19 vaccine heads down the conveyor to a waiting transport truck at the McKesson facility in Shepherdsv­ille, Ky., on March 1.

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