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Missouri newest COVID hotspot due to variant and vaccine hesitancy
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COVID infection rates rise in eight states: low vaccination numbers
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Vermont s unique approach to COVID-19 vaccine disparities
Vermont is the only state to have named people of color as a category for vaccine rollout. Despite the success that the state has seen in narrowing the vaccination margin, questions have been raised about the legality of Vermont s unique vaccine rollout methods.
Several conservative political leaders and right-leaning publications criticized Vermont s decision to open up eligibility to all BIPOC Vermonters as a stage in their rollout plan, with conservative commentator Matt Walsh stating that the move was unconstitutional, according to an April 13 Burlington Free Press article.
Courts do not allow states to give priority to groups solely on the basis of race under the equal protection clause of the 14th Amendment, said law professor Peter Teachout in the April 13 article.
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Amid intensifying calls for wealthy nations to share their COVID vaccine surplus with the rest of the world, the U.S. is poised to step up big time.
President Joe Biden will announce the U.S. has purchased 500 million doses of Pfizer s COVID-19 vaccine to donate to 92 low-income countries and the African Union, a person familiar with the plan told USA TODAY.
Biden is set to announce the donation Thursday in remarks at the Group of Seven summit in Britain. The doses will be distributed through the global vaccine alliance known as COVAX, with 200 million to be shared this year and the remaining 300 million to be donated through the first half of 2022, according to the person, who confirmed the report on condition of anonymity.
Published in 2017, the book chronicles the history of government-sponsored housing segregation in America.
The CRD attempted to hold a similar event last year, but the shutdown due to COVID-19 forced them to shelve the idea for a later date.
“Now that we have been able to get through a lot of the uncertainties of COVID, and with technology and having Zoom, we’ve been able to work on bringing it in a safer way to the community,” said Julia Ramos, community relations specialist for the city of Salina.
While they would have preferred the option to have an in-person event, Ramos said it was better to hold it online than to not have it at all.
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