Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Can someone please tell me how people are getting these appointments. I am phase 3 and preregistered with both the state and the county. I have been getting/expect to get radio silence. How are people snagging individual appointments at any particular mass vax site? What are my chances of getting a walk-in vaccine?
Preregistering has done nothing for me but if you check mdvax.info or even just call the M and T site you might find something.
It’s a stupid effing system though that has all of us calling checking 15 different websites
Anonymous wrote:Can someone please tell me how people are getting these appointments. I am phase 3 and preregistered with both the state and the county. I have been getting/expect to get radio silence. How are people snagging individual appointments at any particular mass vax site? What are my chances of getting a walk-in vaccine?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any Virginians going there? Is it a total free-for-all?
I am tempted, but if I have to go to Salisbury then I will just go to rehoboth de and get shot there and check on 2nd home. I really don’t want to drive 3 hours to de for vaccine. Why is fairfax county so slow? High population I guess.
Wow, if I lived in Fairfax and had a second home in Delaware I would’ve been to Salisbury already. just go on a Friday, get the shot, keep going, and then spend the weekend there. Repeat three weeks later. It’s not exactly on the way but it’s pretty close. We have a second home in New Jersey and got vaccinated there a month ago.
Anonymous wrote:Can someone please tell me how people are getting these appointments. I am phase 3 and preregistered with both the state and the county. I have been getting/expect to get radio silence. How are people snagging individual appointments at any particular mass vax site? What are my chances of getting a walk-in vaccine?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any Virginians going there? Is it a total free-for-all?
I am tempted, but if I have to go to Salisbury then I will just go to rehoboth de and get shot there and check on 2nd home. I really don’t want to drive 3 hours to de for vaccine. Why is fairfax county so slow? High population I guess.
Anonymous wrote:+1 — no one is saying the Shore shouldn’t have a site, just that it was wrong to open one there weeks before PG or MoCo counties and it’s wrong to keep allocating the same number of doses if there is excess supply there and excess demand in the DC suburbs.
Hogan has been terrible at vaccine rollout.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Any Virginians going there? Is it a total free-for-all?
I am tempted, but if I have to go to Salisbury then I will just go to rehoboth de and get shot there and check on 2nd home. I really don’t want to drive 3 hours to de for vaccine. Why is fairfax county so slow? High population I guess.
Anonymous wrote:Any Virginians going there? Is it a total free-for-all?
Anonymous wrote:+1 — no one is saying the Shore shouldn’t have a site, just that it was wrong to open one there weeks before PG or MoCo counties and it’s wrong to keep allocating the same number of doses if there is excess supply there and excess demand in the DC suburbs.
Hogan has been terrible at vaccine rollout.
Anonymous wrote:+1 — no one is saying the Shore shouldn’t have a site, just that it was wrong to open one there weeks before PG or MoCo counties and it’s wrong to keep allocating the same number of doses if there is excess supply there and excess demand in the DC suburbs.
Hogan has been terrible at vaccine rollout.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We want convenient sites in parts of the state where uptake is low so that there will be a low barrier to entry for people who might otherwise just avoid it altogether. Yes, it isn't ideal for MoCo and PrGeorge folks, but I support having excess capacity in other areas of the state.
I agree. If there wasn't a mass vax site on the Eastern Shore that would be seen as inequitable too. The populations of the counties from the Bay Bridge south are around 350k so it's a large enough group that it needs to be served.
PG got one of the earliest mass vax sites and now has another. The situation with no site in MoCo was more frustrating and clearly political. But that doesn't mean that the Eastern Shore shouldn't have one. (and I say this as a MoCo resident who drove to Salisbury and will go again next week).
Agreed. Eastern Shore has one mass vax site to cover _9_ counties.
Nine counties with 450,000 people. Only 8% of Marylanders.
It's not just population, but there's also distance for people to travel to get to a site.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We want convenient sites in parts of the state where uptake is low so that there will be a low barrier to entry for people who might otherwise just avoid it altogether. Yes, it isn't ideal for MoCo and PrGeorge folks, but I support having excess capacity in other areas of the state.
I agree. If there wasn't a mass vax site on the Eastern Shore that would be seen as inequitable too. The populations of the counties from the Bay Bridge south are around 350k so it's a large enough group that it needs to be served.
PG got one of the earliest mass vax sites and now has another. The situation with no site in MoCo was more frustrating and clearly political. But that doesn't mean that the Eastern Shore shouldn't have one. (and I say this as a MoCo resident who drove to Salisbury and will go again next week).
Agreed. Eastern Shore has one mass vax site to cover _9_ counties.
Nine counties with 450,000 people. Only 8% of Marylanders.
OK, so 8% of Marylanders who live in what is by definition a rural area, which means driving longer distances for necessities.
It's not just population, but there's also distance for people to travel to get to a site.