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June 26, 2025

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News COVID-19

Talbot Hits Covid Vaccine Milestone; FEMA Clinics Continue at Easton Elks

April 20, 2021 by Spy Desk
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Half of Talbot County residents have received at least one COVID-19 vaccine dose.

If you have not been vaccinated, please schedule an appointment.

The Talbot County Vaccine Helpline is 410-819-5641. You can also visit www.talbothealth.org for local vaccine information.

Vaccine availability in the next few weeks

FEMA Vaccine Clinics at the Easton Elks Lodge

Easton Elks Lodge #1622 is located at 502 Dutchmans Lane in Easton. No insurance is required. You only need to be Maryland resident. Please share with anyone you know seeking vaccination.

Registration links for FEMA Vaccine Clinics at the Easton Elks Lodge are as follows:

Tuesday, April 20, 11 a.m. – 7 p.m.: https://bit.ly/3dkyjik

Wednesday, April 21, 8 a.m. – 4 p.m.: https://bit.ly/3djRSal

Thursday, April 22, 8 a.m. – 4 p.m.: https://bit.ly/3g9Sstj

Saturday, April 24, 11 a.m. – 7 p.m.: https://bit.ly/3wXQ8vg

Sunday, April 25, 11 a.m. – 7 p.m.: https://bit.ly/3g9Swt3

Multicultural Vaccination and Wellness Day, 10 a.m. to 2 p.m. Saturday, May 1, at Idlewild Park in Easton

Register for the vaccine in advance by April 21 at the links below.

English – https://forms.gle/45TCxx7b9pPwKm1o7

Espanol – https://forms.gle/ciCtLuR4RKZio7wQ8

For any Spanish or Creole-speaking community members who may need help registering, please contact Jennifer Villacorta at ChesMRC 877- 772-9832.

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: COVID-19 Tagged With: clinics, Covid-19, FEMA, Talbot County, vaccination, vaccine

New Vaccine Sign-up a ‘Start,’ But More Is Needed, Officials Say

March 16, 2021 by Maryland Matters
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For weeks, state legislators and local leaders have pleaded with the Maryland Department of Health to institute a sign-up system for its COVID-19 vaccination program.

On Saturday, Gov. Lawrence J. Hogan Jr. (R) announced a partial, but significant step in that direction — the creation of a new pre-registration system for Maryland’s five mass-vaccination sites.

Marylanders in Phase 1 can pre-register at covidvax.maryland.gov or by calling the state’s COVID-19 vaccination support center, at 1-855-MD-GOVAX (1-855-634-6829).

State lawmakers and others said the move represented a good, but overdue, first step. Some suggested that local health departments should have been made a part of the new system.

According to news release circulated on Saturday, Marylanders who pre-register will be notified once an appointment is available. They will then be asked to verify their pre-registration status and reserve an appointment.

The state stressed that appointments will not be doled out on a first-come, first-serve basis. “To help ensure vaccine equity, appointments will be released based on eligibility and supply,” the unsigned news release stated.

People who pre-register with the state can (and probably should) put their names on other lists as well.

Local health officers, county leaders, state lawmakers, members of Congress and residents have pressed the Hogan administration for weeks to institute a statewide sign-up system.

They complained that the current system essentially forced vaccine-seekers to sign-up in multiple places — including pharmacy chains, supermarkets, their local health department and elsewhere — spending long hours on the computer in the process.

Many said the result was a “Hunger Games”-style competition that benefited those with computers, reliable internet service, flexible work schedules and technological savvy. The COVID pandemic has disproportionately impacted people of color, lower-income Marylanders and people with jobs that require contact with the public.

Saturday’s statement gave no explanation for the apparent about-face.

“We’ve all got a lot to gain by working together to improve the front-end process for people seeking a vaccination,” said Michael Sanderson, executive director of the Maryland Association of Counties.

He said that if local health departments are “able to piggyback on this state system” in the future, it “might simplify things for lots of Marylanders seeking shots.”

Harford County Executive Barry Glassman (R) offered a similar thought.

“It’s certainly a step forward and will hopefully help the state centralize all registrations on a consolidated site to relieve folks from having to surf several sites,” he said.

Acting Health Secretary Dennis R. Schrader briefs the state Senate’s Vaccine Work Group every week. Despite repeated calls for a more centralized sign-up process, Schrader has defended Maryland’s approach, saying that a statewide portal risked becoming “a single point of failure.”

Sen. Clarence K. Lam (D-Howard), a physician and a member of the panel, called the new system “a positive development” but he said it does not go far enough to simplify the process.

“After nearly two months since my colleagues and I in the Senate suggested a single registration site, this is a long overdue improvement,” he said.

“While this is a positive development, it is only limited to the handful of the state’s mass vaccination sites and unfortunately still leaves out the thousands of other vaccine providers in the state from a single sign-up process, which we continue to hear frustration from our constituents about on a daily basis.”

Residents who pre-register will be asked to provide demographic information, including gender, race and ethnicity. They will be asked to indicate a preferred location and whether they have special needs, such as language services, assistive technology or help with transportation.

The state currently has five mass-vaccination sites. They are located in Baltimore, Largo, Salisbury, Hagerstown and Waldorf.

Sen. Paul G. Pinsky (D-Prince George’s), the chairman of the Education, Health and Environmental Affairs Committee, said, “I welcome the centralized vaccination approach. My only question: why has it taken three months of chaos and a ‘go it alone approach’ to get to this point?”

By Bruce DePuyt

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Maryland News Tagged With: clinics, coronavirus, Covid-19, Maryland, mass-vaccination sites, pre-registration, vaccination

State Ramps Up Vaccine Equity Plan; Hogan and Scott Spar Over Doses, Funding

March 5, 2021 by Maryland Matters
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After weeks of pressure to boost the distribution of COVID-19 vaccine into communities hit hardest by the virus, Gov. Lawrence J. Hogan Jr. (R) on Thursday announced new efforts to reach minority and low-income residents.

The campaign will give community organizations that want to host vaccination clinics the opportunity to apply for doses and support.

One such clinic, Hogan said, will open on March 16 at First Baptist Church of Glenarden, a site requested by Prince George’s County Executive Angela D. Alsobrooks (D).

The site will be supported by the University of Maryland Capital Region Health. When fully operational, it will administer 900 doses a day, officials said.

Maryland National Guard Brigadier General Janeen Birckhead said other locations will be evaluated as their requests come in. The state, which will serve as a “clearinghouse,” will look at a range of statistics in the surrounding community — including vaccine disparities, household density, family incomes, vehicle access, and the percentage of seniors and single parents — in determining which applications to approve.

Birckhead leads the state’s Vaccine Equity Task Force, which Hogan formed in late January. She said the task force will assist local organizations in filling out their paperwork.

“It’s a top-down and a bottom-up approach,” Hogan told reporters at a State House news conference. “We’re trying to do everything we possibly can.”

Hogan said 60.4% of Maryland’s vaccines have gone to white residents; the state’s population is 58.5% white.

“We’re not where we need to be with the Black community or the Hispanic community,” he said. “We’re continuing to take every effort to ramp that up.”

Although the state’s three mass vaccination sites are located in majority-Black communities, residents of surrounding counties have swooped in to obtain the majority of the shots. A fourth high-volume site, in Waldorf, had a “soft launch” on Thursday, administering 500 vaccine doses. Charles County also has a majority-Black population.

In Prince George’s, only 10% of the first 32,000 doses administered at Six Flags America went to county residents. Alsobrooks, who has been reluctant to criticize the state, called that “unfair” and “outrageous.”

Like all states, Maryland has seen demand for the vaccine greatly outstrip supply.

But critics — including an array of Democratic local officials, state lawmakers, members of Congress and advocates for the disadvantaged — have accused the state of bungling its vaccine rollout.

They say the complicated system, with its layers of distribution points, favors people with flexible schedules, computer and internet access, and technological savvy.

The task force also announced Thursday that it is working to bring mobile vaccination clinics to Western Maryland and the Eastern Shore. State-owned vaccination trailers will make stops throughout the Eastern Shore.

Maryland will coordinate with the Federal Emergency Management Agency to utilize larger mobile clinics on the Eastern Shore and in Western Maryland.

“We have listened and we will assist,” Birckhead said. “We still have a way to go.”

Raskin, Trone seek mass-vaccination site in Montgomery

In a Wednesday letter to Hogan, the Montgomery County Council said the state’s distribution campaign has mirrored the epidemic itself, with people of color and low-wage residents being impacted disproportionately.

“Black residents are dying at higher rates and we’re not getting vaccinated,” said Montgomery County Council member Will Jawando (D) in a statement. “Our Latino population has also been disproportionately affected by this disease.”

“We need a statewide approach that factors in race and ethnicity. We want everyone to have access and it needs to be done in a targeted way,” he added.

Two-thirds of Montgomery’s doses have gone to white residents, who make up 43% of the population, lawmakers wrote. Black people represent 19% of the population but have received only 8% of the doses, while 9% of the county’s Latinx residents, who represent 20% of the population, have been vaccinated.

Reps. Jamie Raskin (D) and David J. Trone (D) on Thursday urged the governor to establish a mass-vaccination site in the county. In a letter, the lawmakers noted that Montgomery is the state’s largest county and has both a majority-minority population and “a significant health care workforce and a substantial elderly population over the age of 75.”

Raskin and Trone said that — although the mass-vax sites in Baltimore and Prince George’s counties are open to Montgomery County residents — “this offer seems like cold comfort when so many logistical hurdles face lower-income, working-class, immigrant, and senior residents in Montgomery who are unable to arrange transportation or get time off from work to travel to distant sites.”

Hogan, Scott spar over doses, funding

Hogan praised the Prince George’s County Health Department, which he said had improved its vaccination program following a slow start.

But he ratcheted-up a war of words with Baltimore officials.

Hogan told reporters that the city had declined to accept $8.8 million in federal funds to support its vaccination efforts, and that Baltimore had requested that doses in its control be transferred to hospitals and retail pharmacies.

“I don’t want to be criticizing the mayor in any way,” the governor said. “But he kept saying that they weren’t getting enough [doses]. And the [city] health department kept saying ‘We have way too much. Please send them somewhere else.’”

Hogan suggested that Baltimore Mayor Brandon Scott, who took office in December, “talk to his health department.”

A short time later, Scott went before cameras at City Hall to refute Hogan’s charges, which he called “categorically untrue.”

The mayor said doses have been redeployed to Baltimore hospitals and pharmacies as part of an “equitable and rapid” strategy to reach residents across the city. The state has approved the city’s requests, Scott added.

He also denied turning down vaccination funding, saying the city prefers to deal directly with FEMA, from whom it can seek 100% reimbursement.

“The governor is aware that this is false but continues to repeat it,” Scott alleged. “While the governor continues to go back and forth about petty politics, people are dying from the virus.”

Health Commissioner Letitia Dzirasa said the use of hospitals and pharmacies helps residents who aren’t able to negotiate an online sign-up system which she likened to “a Hunger Games-style competition.”

“It allows us to ensure our doses are going to city residents who are eligible but that have been left behind by the state’s rollout to date,” she said.

The Hogan administration’s claims about the city first surfaced on Wednesday.

Scott called them a “Jedi mind trick” and a “distraction.”

By Bruce DePuyt

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Maryland News Tagged With: clinics, coronavirus, Covid-19, Gov. Larry Hogan, sites, vaccine

Md. to Open 6 Mass Vaccination Sites as Biden Vows More Doses for States

January 27, 2021 by Maryland Matters
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Maryland will open six mass vaccination sites beginning early next month to help boost the state’s distribution of COVID-19 vaccine, Gov. Lawrence J. Hogan Jr. (R) announced on Tuesday. 

The number of big-name supermarket and drug store chains offering the vaccine will also grow in the weeks ahead, Hogan said. 

In addition, the governor said the state will make new efforts to get the vaccine into minority and low-income neighborhoods, where vaccination rates have lagged. 

Despite Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and independent tallies showing that Maryland has one of the lowest vaccine use-rates in the nation, Hogan told reporters at a State House news conference that supply — not distribution — remains the biggest challenge.

“We have 100,000 doses. We have 2 million people that want to make an appointment,” Hogan said. “I know this is really frustrating.” 

The Maryland Department of Health reported on Tuesday that 396,661 of the 667,275 doses that the state has distributed to hospitals, local health departments, pharmacies, long-term care facilities and others locations, have been used. 

A Bloomberg tracker puts the state’s allocation total a bit higher (742,175) and its doses-administered tally a bit lower (372,937). According to Bloomberg, Maryland’s 50.2% use-rate is among the lowest in the nation, ahead of only five states and a smattering of territories.

Hogan said many of the state’s unused doses are being held so that people who have received their first shot can return for the second one. The Pfizer and Moderna vaccines require two doses to deliver maximum protection against COVID-19.

“Those can’t be sped up,” the governor said. “They have to be held until the date that they’re allowed to be given.” 

To reach more people, Maryland will open “mass vaccination” sites at the Six Flags amusement park in Prince George’s County and the Baltimore Convention Center no later than Feb. 5.

M&T Bank Stadium, also in Baltimore, will also serve as a mass vaccination site. Locations on the Eastern Shore, in Western Maryland and Southern Maryland will be announced soon, Hogan said. 

Maryland’s six new large vaccination sites will operate on an appointment-only basis.

To increase the state’s reach into neighborhoods, Hogan said 22 Giant supermarkets in Prince George’s and Montgomery counties and greater Baltimore, three Martin’s locations and 10 Walmarts on the Eastern Shore and in Western Maryland have all begun offering vaccinations this week. 

Sixteen Safeway and Rite-Aid locations will begin doing so next week.

“We are utilizing data and modeling to prioritize under-served areas and places where there is the greatest need,” Hogan said. 

The Democrats in Maryland’s congressional delegation — both U.S. senators and seven of eight members of the U.S. House — criticized the state’s track record just before Hogan spoke.

“A robust vaccination strategy is critical to our efforts to defeat COVID-19 in Maryland. But according to the CDC, Maryland’s COVID-19 vaccine distribution system ranks as one of the worst-performing statewide efforts in the country,” the lawmakers wrote. 

“Early data also suggests that Maryland has immunized communities of color at significantly lower rates. These issues must be addressed by the State at once.”

Rep. Andrew P. Harris (R), a physician, did not sign the letter.

Federal government sending more doses to states 

Amid frustrations at the slow pace of the national COVID-19 vaccination effort, President Biden said Tuesday that his administration is boosting the number of doses sent to states each week and will be giving state officials more certainty on the number of doses they can expect in future shipments.

Starting next week, a minimum of 10 million vaccine doses per week will be distributed across states, tribes and territories. That’s an increase from 8.6 million doses per week, and a volume that administration officials say they will maintain for each of at least the next three weeks.

States then will continue to receive allocation estimates three weeks in advance, a shift from the week-ahead figures that the Trump administration’s Operation Warp Speed had offered to state officials.

“Until now, we’ve had to guess how much vaccine to get for the next week, and that’s what the governors had to do, how much am I getting next week?” Biden said Tuesday afternoon as he announced the policy changes. “This is unacceptable. Lives are at stake here.”

The administration also is working to purchase an additional 200 million vaccine doses — 100 million doses each of the vaccines developed by Pfizer-BioNTech and Moderna, the only two that so far have cleared the Food and Drug Administration’s emergency authorization process.

Those purchases would bring the total of vaccine doses expected to be delivered in the U.S. by this summer to 600 million, or enough to vaccinate 300 million Americans with the two-dose vaccines.

Governors were briefed on the upcoming changes Tuesday during a call with Biden’s COVID-19 response coordinator, Jeff Zients.

“We appreciate the administration stating that it will provide states with slightly higher allocations for the next few weeks, but we are going to need much more supply,” Hogan said.

One of Biden’s first efforts since taking office last week has been attempting to overhaul the disjointed federal response to the COVID-19 pandemic. He’s required more mask-wearing, directed officials to fill gaps in supplies, announced a national strategy to standardize the state-by-state vaccine approach under the Trump administration, and called on Congress to provide more money for the national undertaking.

Incomplete and lagging data has clouded the picture of the vaccine administration campaign. While states have begged for more doses as vaccination appointments are quickly snatched up, data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention also shows a gap between the vaccine doses delivered to states and those that have been administered.

Of the more than 44 million doses that the CDC says have been delivered, only 23.5 million have gone into the arms of Americans so far. More than 20 million people have gotten their first doses, and roughly 3.5 million have gotten both doses.

Biden has said he wants to see 100 million doses administered during his first 100 days. The U.S. is on pace to meet that goal, and he’s suggested the administration may aim to reach 1.5 million doses per day, up from the current 1 million doses per day.

Hogan said Maryland’s private sector partnerships, coordination with local health departments and use of National Guard personnel are part of the state’s efforts to vaccinate “much higher volumes” of people.

“As soon as the state receives higher allocation from the federal government, our infrastructure will already be in place,” he said. 

But Anne Arundel County Executive Steuart Pittman (D) faulted Hogan’s reliance on the private sector, saying local governments are more efficient.

“Maryland statistics show that local health departments are getting shots in arms more efficiently than pharmacy chains and hospitals, but the state is shifting allocations toward the less efficient providers,” he told Maryland Matters. “I don’t get it.”

The governor said hospitals that have fallen under 75% of utilization “are not being prioritized for additional allocations and will not receive allocations until they demonstrate that they can pick up the pace.” 

By Bruce DePuyt of Maryland Matters and Laura Olson of  States Newsroom

The Spy Newspapers may periodically employ the assistance of artificial intelligence (AI) to enhance the clarity and accuracy of our content.

Filed Under: Maryland News Tagged With: clinics, coronavirus, Covid-19, Gov. Larry Hogan, president joe biden, vaccinations, vaccine

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