Florida Working On Statewide Appointment System For COVID-19 Vaccinations

TALLAHASSEE (CBSMiami/AP) - In an effort to bring order to Florida's chaotic rollout of COVID-19 vaccines, the state's emergency director has announced that a statewide appointment system for vaccinations should be ready in a couple of weeks.

Director Jared Moskowitz described plans for the online portal in an appearance before a legislative house committee holding hearings on the pandemic in Tallahassee.

Gov. Ron DeSantis has made it a priority to provide coronavirus vaccines to seniors 65 and older, prompting a crush of demand. State health officials mostly left it to hospitals and county health departments to administer the vaccines, and some seniors camped out in long lines outside vaccination sites, only to be turned away when supplies ran out.

Since then, the governor has sought to widen the number of vaccination sites.

Related: What You Need To Know About Getting The COVID-19 Vaccine In South Florida

As of this week, more than 707,000 Floridians had at least one shot of two vaccines approved by the federal government. More than 1.5 million people have tested positive for the virus in the state since the pandemic began; nearly 24,000 have died.

The pandemic has also had a sweeping effect on the state's economy, especially in the tourism sector.

New claims for jobless benefits tripled last week in Florida as the new coronavirus continued taking its toll on the tourist-dependent state. The U.S. Department of Labor on Thursday reported that new jobless claims in the state jumped to 75,444 last week, up from 24,697 in the previous week.

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The high pace of layoffs has coincided with an economy that has faltered as snowbirds from Canada and U.S. states to the north have stayed away from Florida because of pandemic travel concerns during what is typically a busy time of year for visitors. Although some snowbirds who own homes in Florida say they have gotten vaccines while here.

With states beholden to the federal government for supplies, no one can be sure when enough vaccines will be available to meet demand.

Florida Surgeon General Scott Rivkees told the Senate Health Policy Committee on Wednesday that Florida is getting about a million doses a month -- suggesting that it could take many months before the general population can be fully vaccinated.

Rivkees, like the governor, has urged patience.

"This vaccine is our ray of hope," Rivkees told the committee.

Other vaccines are expected to gain federal approval in the coming months, which will surely bolster the state's ability to vaccinate Florida's 21.5 million residents.

The top Democrat in the state Senate, Sen. Gary Farmer, acknowledged the state is beholden to the federal government but criticized DeSantis for his "lack of leadership" in the pandemic. Farmer said the distribution of the vaccine has been in disarray because of a lack of a cohesive plan to get the shots into the arms of Floridians.

At some vaccination sites, seniors have had to be turned away because vaccine allotments had dried up. Appointment websites have crashed because of the crush in demand.

"A lot of people are asking the question: When are we going to have the vaccine, and what does the timeline look like?" asked Sen. Aaron Bean, a Republican.

"Is it fair to say that at current supply, in simpleton's terms, that at current supply, it's a 22-month window maximum?" the senator asked.

Rivkees said he hopes other vaccines will soon come into the market to potentially speed up the timetable.

"We are very hopeful that other vaccines will follow in the near term," Rivkees said.

(© Copyright 2021 CBS Broadcasting Inc. All Rights Reserved. The Associated Press contributed to this report.)

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