Hogan: ‘Mass vaccination sites’ to be set up throughout Maryland

Hogan: ‘Mass vaccination sites’ to be set up throughout Maryland

Gov. Larry Hogan speaks at a news conference on Tuesday afternoon (Bryan Renbaum/MarylandReporter.com)

@BryanRenbaum

To speed up and increase the efficiency of the state’s rollout of its supply of coronavirus vaccines “mass vaccination sites” will be set up throughout Maryland, Gov. Larry Hogan said Tuesday.

“With the anticipation that the federal government will be able to address these supply chain issues and that they will increase deliveries to the states-we have directed the Maryland Department of Health and the Maryland National Guard to work with county leaders, with hospitals and with private partners to establish mass vaccination sites at at least six central locations statewide,” Hogan said at a news conference at the State House in Annapolis.

Hogan said that the “hundreds” of the state’s guard members that had been deployed to Washington, D.C. to assist with security for last week’s inauguration ceremony for President Joe Biden will be “immediately” redeployed back to Maryland to help “plan, build, and launch” the vaccination sites.

Hogan said that Six Flags amusement park in Prince George’s County is in the process of being converted into a vaccination site and that it will open by Friday, Feb 6. at the latest. Vaccination sites will also be set up in Baltimore at the Convention Center’s field hospital on Feb. 6 and at M&T Stadium when possible, Hogan said.

Hogan said that each vaccination site will be available to all Marylanders regardless of which part of the state they live in. An appointment must be made in advance in order to get vaccinated, Hogan said.

Hogan said that beginning February 1, the state will expand vaccine eligibility to include “severely immunocompromised” Marylanders, such as those who have cancer and diabetes. The state is currently in Phase 1C its vaccination plan which covers Marylanders between ages 65-74 as well as some essential workers.

At Tuesday’s news conference, MarylandReporter.com asked Hogan if he expects the state to receive vaccines at a faster pace under the Biden administration than were received under the Trump administration. Hogan said while he is “hopeful” that the change in leadership will speed up supply he is not certain that that will be the case.

“We heard a week or two ago that there were 55,000,000 more doses that were sitting in Michigan that they said the Trump administration hadn’t acquired that they could immediately get out. That turned out not to be true…Today I think there is some report about maybe a 16% increase. So instead of getting 10,000 a day, we get another thousand a day. We’re doing 18,000 a day. So that’s not going to make that much of a difference to us at all.”

The pace of the administration’s vaccine rollout plan has been criticized by many Democrats in the General Assembly, such as Senate President Bill Ferguson. Ferguson has established a Senate workgroup to oversee the administration’s stewardship of vaccine distribution. The workgroup held its first meeting on Monday.

There are 344,620 confirmed cases of COVID-19 in Maryland as of Tuesday morning, according to the Department of Health, and 6,788 people in Maryland have died from the virus. The state’s positivity rate is at 6.64%, which is about two percentage points above CDC recommended guidelines for containment. Maryland has conducted nearly 6.8 million COVID-19 tests.

About The Author

Bryan Renbaum

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Reporter Bryan Renbaum served as the Capitol Hill Correspondent for Talk Media News for the past three-and-a-half years, filing print, radio and video reports on the Senate and the House of Representatives. He covered congressional reaction to the inauguration of President Donald Trump as well as the confirmation hearings of attorneys general Jeff Sessions and William Barr and Supreme Court Justice Brett Kavanaugh. He also filed breaking news reports on the 2017 shooting of House Majority Whip Steve Scalise and three others. Previously Bryan broke multiple stories with the Baltimore Post-Examiner including sexual assault scandals at the University of Maryland, Baltimore County and a texting scandal on the women’s lacrosse team at that school for which he was interviewed by ABC’s “Good Morning America.” He also covered the Maryland General Assembly during the 2016 legislative session as an intern for Maryland Reporter. He has a bachelor’s degree in political science from McDaniel College. If you have additional questions or comments contact Bryan at: [email protected]

1 Comment

  1. Charmaine Barnes

    So if you are immune compromised and age 65 how is it I cannot even get an appointment. This is really messed up…I called my doctor and he says you need to find a site and make an appointment. It was listed on Fox News that Bayview was one of the sites and so I signed up only to learn they have no appointments available. I am to wait and they will notify me.

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