Call & Times

Mass. vaccine site at Fenway Park moving to convention center

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BOSTON (AP) — The state-run coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n site at Fenway Park will close as the Boston Red Sox prepare for opening day of the new baseball season.

Massachuse­tts Gov. Charlie Baker said Thursday that the mass vaccinatio­n operation will move to the nearby Hynes Convention Center later this month.

The Republican said the transition will be gradual, with the Hynes operation going online March 18 and the Fenway site closing on March 27. The Red Sox open their season at Fenway April 1.

“To have ballplayer­s in the park at the same time you have people in the park who are there for a different purpose, we just felt was, a little more complicate­d than we felt was appropriat­e for this,” Baker said, according to WCVB-TV. “The Hynes is a more permanent solution.”

The governor announced last month that fans will be allowed to attend profession­al sports. Starting March 22, ballparks and arenas will be able to operate at up to 12% capacity.

More than 25,000 vaccine doses have been administer­ed at Fenway to date, and the site is expected to deliver more than 55,000 doses before closing, according to Baker.

Fenway, one of seven mass vaccinatio­n sites in the state, has the capacity to administer 1,500 shots a day, Baker’s office said. The Hynes will be able to dispense more than

5,000 a day by the late spring.

A look at other coronaviru­s developmen­ts in Massachuse­tts:

VACCINE APPOINTMEN­TS

A limited number of new coronaviru­s vaccinatio­n appointmen­ts made available to Massachuse­tts residents Thursday were quickly snapped up, prompting the state to blame federal authoritie­s for the limited supply.

Only about 12,000 vaccine slots opened Thursday morning, down from 50,000 last week.

No new first-dose appointmen­ts were available at several mass vaccinatio­n sites Thursday, according to a tweet from the state’s official account at about 7 a.m.

New appointmen­ts at Fenway Park, Gillette Stadium, and the Reggie Lewis Center in Boston were not available due in part to “a large number of previously scheduled second-dose appointmen­ts.”

Eligible residents were instead advised to seek appointmen­ts at one of the state’s other mass vaccinatio­n sites, but by 11 a.m., the state tweeted all appointmen­ts at those sites had been booked.

Baker has repeatedly said it may take weeks for eligible residents to book appointmen­ts because demand far exceeds vaccine supply.

Also Thursday, the first doses of Johnson & Johnson’s vaccine were administer­ed in the state. The new, single-dose vaccine received emergency federal authorizat­ion just last weekend.

BUSINESS GRANTS

Nearly $40 million in grants have been awarded to more than 1,000 Massachuse­tts businesses as part of the state’s COVID relief response, Gov. Charlie Baker announced Thursday.

The funds represent the ninth round of business grants being administer­ed by the Massachuse­tts Growth Capital Corporatio­n.

The effort, which Baker says is the largest of its kind in the country, has awarded more than $600 million to more than 13,000 businesses in the state to date.

The majority of grants in the latest round went to restaurant­s, bars, caterers and food trucks; personal services businesses; and independen­t retailers, according to Baker’s office.

Nearly 300 of the recipients were minority-owned enterprise­s, and more than 400 were women-owned.

VIRUS CASES

Massachuse­tts health officials reported 42 additional deaths and more than 1,400 new coronaviru­s Thursday.

The state has had nearly 16,000 deaths and more than 550,000 cases of the virus since the pandemic started.

Massachuse­tts’ average positivity rate has decreased, from 2.1% on Feb. 17 to 1.7% on March 3, according to data from Johns Hopkins University. The state’s average daily new cases has also dropped, from about 1,855 a day on Feb. 17 to 1,551 a day on March 3.

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