Health commissioner calls Milwaukee s lead crisis imperative
MATT MARTINEZ of Milwaukee Neighborhood News Service
July 23, 2021
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MILWAUKEE (AP) In a wide-ranging interview with NNS, new Milwaukee Health Commissioner Kirsten Johnson said her top priority is tackling the city’s ongoing lead crisis, which she called “the pandemic before the pandemic.”
Johnson, who joined the department in March, said although the COVID-19 pandemic remains a challenge, she also wants to begin reversing policies that have worsened health outcomes for the city’s Black and brown residents. This includes the city’s lead abatement program that focuses on removing lead from pipes, paint and soil in the city.
Commissioner Johnson said she can fix department s troubled lead program. //end headline wrapper ?>Get a daily rundown of the top stories on Urban Milwaukee
Milwaukee Health Department Commissioner Kirsten Johnson speaks at a news conference earlier this month on door-to-door vaccinations. Photo provided by Milwaukee Health Department/NNS.
In a wide-ranging interview with NNS, new Milwaukee Health Commissioner
Kirsten Johnson said her top priority is tackling the city’s ongoing lead crisis, which she called “the pandemic before the pandemic.”
Johnson, who joined the department in March, said although the COVID-19 pandemic remains a challenge, she also wants to begin reversing policies that have worsened health outcomes for the city’s Black and brown residents. This includes the city’s lead abatement program that focuses on removing lead from pipes, paint and soil in the city.
Wisconsin s promised vaccine registry site has launched with just one vaccinator while state works out glitches Daphne Chen, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Wisconsin s promised vaccine registry site launched Wednesday with just one participant, as the health department works out glitches with the Microsoft-designed software.
The state-sponsored vaccination clinic in Rock County is the only vaccinator available at www.vaccinate.wi.gov.
In a news briefing Tuesday, state Department of Health Services Deputy Secretary Julie Willems Van Dijk said the department ran into some components that were not functioning the way we anticipated during pilot testing last week and over the weekend.