Anonymous wrote:Now that Trump is gone I am sure that Bowser can solve this with a phone call to President Biden.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.nbcwashington.com/investigations/nearly-half-of-dcs-vaccine-doses-have-gone-to-non-residents/2554842/
Of the 51,421 doses of vaccine administered in the District as of Jan. 23, data shows 47 percent went to workers who don't live in D.C. That’s far higher than in Virginia, where at least 85 percent of the commonwealth’s administered doses have gone to Virginians, and in Maryland, where at least 93 percent of doses have gone to its residents, according to an I-Team review of vaccine data mapped by in-state recipients.
The disparity is not that surprising. Most of VA and MD are not part of the deeply interdependent DC metro area. All of DC is.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.nbcwashington.com/investigations/nearly-half-of-dcs-vaccine-doses-have-gone-to-non-residents/2554842/
Of the 51,421 doses of vaccine administered in the District as of Jan. 23, data shows 47 percent went to workers who don't live in D.C. That’s far higher than in Virginia, where at least 85 percent of the commonwealth’s administered doses have gone to Virginians, and in Maryland, where at least 93 percent of doses have gone to its residents, according to an I-Team review of vaccine data mapped by in-state recipients.
The disparity is not that surprising. Most of VA and MD are not part of the deeply interdependent DC metro area. All of DC is.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.nbcwashington.com/investigations/nearly-half-of-dcs-vaccine-doses-have-gone-to-non-residents/2554842/
Of the 51,421 doses of vaccine administered in the District as of Jan. 23, data shows 47 percent went to workers who don't live in D.C. That’s far higher than in Virginia, where at least 85 percent of the commonwealth’s administered doses have gone to Virginians, and in Maryland, where at least 93 percent of doses have gone to its residents, according to an I-Team review of vaccine data mapped by in-state recipients.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, the hospitals, nursing homes and feds were first to vaccinate essential workers. And a lot of the people who work in DC in those roles don’t live in DC. This is not particularly surprising given how we are going about it.
Essential workers and health care workers were vaccinated first. These are nursing assistants, nurses, janitorial staff, etc. Many of them can’t afford to live in the District and live in my neighborhood in PG County. As you start vaccinating the general public the percentage of DC residents will go up.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Yeah, the hospitals, nursing homes and feds were first to vaccinate essential workers. And a lot of the people who work in DC in those roles don’t live in DC. This is not particularly surprising given how we are going about it.
Essential workers and health care workers were vaccinated first. These are nursing assistants, nurses, janitorial staff, etc. Many of them can’t afford to live in the District and live in my neighborhood in PG County. As you start vaccinating the general public the percentage of DC residents will go up.
Anonymous wrote:Yeah, the hospitals, nursing homes and feds were first to vaccinate essential workers. And a lot of the people who work in DC in those roles don’t live in DC. This is not particularly surprising given how we are going about it.
As the region scrambles to vaccinate as many people as possible, the District, Virginia and Maryland have each agreed to vaccinate people who work in essential roles, no matter where they live.