265 vaccinated on Jan. 5; no available appointments remain in Flagler

Some are frustrated, but more doses are not available. The county will find out Jan. 8 how many more will be coming and when.


Photo by Hakan Nural on Unsplash
Photo by Hakan Nural on Unsplash
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Updated 6:26 p.m. Jan. 5

Day Two of Flagler County COVID-19 vaccinations finished by lunch time on Tuesday, Jan. 5, with a tone of celebration for the 265 who got their shots, as well as frustration for those who tried to get an appointment but couldn’t due to an overwhelmed phone system and online scramble for time slots.

“It’s been wild,” said Bob Snyder, Flagler’s health officer for the Florida Department of Health. “But it’s been a meaningful experience, very positive. … I wish we could get everyone who wants it now, but we have a limited quantity.”

The 265 vaccinations brought the total to 806, after 541 (mostly health care workers) were vaccinated on Jan. 2, at the Flagler County Fairgrounds.

“It takes a lot of bricks off your shoulders, and it gives you a lot of relief and happiness. It’s what we’ve all been waiting for.”

BOB SNYDER, health officer

Flagler has been given 1,700 Moderna vaccine doses by the state, so about 900 remain, but they're spoken for: Available vaccination appointments in Flagler are booked through Monday already. The DOH will learn on Friday how many more doses will be coming our way.

“It’s frustrating for us not knowing, but it’s not our fault, and it’s not the state’s fault, either,” Emergency Management Chief Jonathan Lord said. “It’s just that the vaccine [doses] don’t exist.”

Appointments were made via Eventbrite (shorturl.at/jsxIP); or by calling the Emergency Operations Center at 386-313-4200. (All slots are "sold out.")

Some struggled with Eventbrite, Lord said. If you added a time slot to your online cart, it was possible to click the button to make the reservation only to be told that it was no longer available, Lord said, because someone else had clicked the button a second earlier.

A new waiting list — and a statewide system — are in the works and could be available soon.

Some were also frustrated that non-Flagler residents apparently got vaccinated here. But federal guidelines don’t require you to get vaccinated near where you live. That means Flagler residents can also find an appointment in another city if they want to. Regional sites in Florida will also open soon, Lord said.

Locally, the EOC’s call center staff of five was overloaded with calls on Jan. 4.

“There were more people calling in here than there were phone lines in county government,” Lord said. “Every single one of them was tied up, and we couldn’t even make outbound calls for the county. We are limited by the tools that are at our disposal. We get it, it is frustrating, but we are trying our best to support the state’s vaccination efforts.”

Lord said he was personally answering calls and emails until 8 p.m. Monday, Jan. 4. He started again at 6 a.m. Jan. 5.

The DOH had 75 people working at the fairgrounds on Jan. 5, divided into four stations to administer the vaccine. They were supported logistically by Flagler County Emergency Management.

Those who got the vaccine were “thrilled” and “comforted,” Snyder said. “It takes a lot of bricks off your shoulders, and it gives you a lot of relief and happiness. It’s what we’ve all been waiting for.”

 

 

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Brian McMillan

Brian McMillan and his wife, Hailey, bought the Observer in 2023. Before taking on his role as publisher, Brian was the editor from 2010 to 2022, winning numerous awards for his column writing, photography and journalism, from the Florida Press Association.

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