You are reading

City Expands List of Queens Neighborhoods Prioritized for COVID-19 Vaccine Distribution

COVID-19 Vaccine (Michael Appleton/Mayoral Photography Office)

Feb. 1, 2021 By Christina Santucci

Several Queens neighborhoods have been added to a priority list for coronavirus vaccine distribution, city officials announced Sunday.

The city announced that it has added four Queens districts–plus two in Brooklyn–to its vaccination priority list, including Jackson Heights and East Elmhurst; Kew Gardens and Woodhaven; Richmond Hill and South Ozone Park; and Queens Village.

The city plans to increase outreach to address vaccine hesitancy and add vaccination sites in these priority zones, although no information about any new sites was available Sunday.

The additions increase the number of priority districts to 33 — previously there were 27.

The city’s Task Force on Racial Inclusion and Equity has identified the 33 priority neighborhoods, which takes into account factors like the virus fatality rate, crowded living conditions and the number of essential workers living in the communities.

Several Queens areas have already been identified as priority zones by the task force, including Queensbridge and Astoria; Elmhurst and Corona; Rockaway and Broad Channel; Jamaica and Hollis; and Briarwood/Flushing South.

“What’s clear is the status quo does not make sense, and we have to do some things differently,” Mayor Bill de Blasio said. “We have looked at the neighborhoods in greatest need and we’ve actually expanded that set of neighborhoods.”

The mayor said that residents would be prioritized for appointments at sites in the 33 neighborhoods  — with specific hours and slots set aside for them. Furthermore, essential workers living in priority neighborhoods would soon be able to be vaccinated with family members.

“That group of 33 neighborhoods are where the most vulnerable people are — vulnerable because that’s where the deaths were,” de Blasio said.

He said residents in these area are also vulnerable because many don’t have faith in the health care system and also lack access to it.

“We have a history of understandable distrust and hesitancy toward vaccination,” he said. “All of these things have to be overcome,” de Blasio said.

Council Member Daniel Dromm thanked the mayor Sunday morning for prioritizing additional areas of his district, which he described as the “epicenter of the epicenter” of the pandemic.

“Now that they’ve acknowledged that, now we need the details: where, when and how,” Dromm said.

De Blasio also said Sunday that the city’s vaccine appointment website would soon have translations in 10 major languages, including Arabic, Bengali, Korean, Urdu and Haitian-Creole.

Dromm said that making that information available in multiple languages was vital to communicating with residents of his district.

“There is already a hesitancy among some of the people who live here and mistrust in the government,” he said. “Having it in their own language is even more important.”

The announcements came during a news conference where the mayor released citywide demographic data, which he said showed a “profound disparity” in who was getting vaccinated.

The data revealed that the plurality of people who have already been vaccinated were white. The data showed that 48 percent of city residents were white, 15 percent Asian, 15 percent Latino, and 11 percent Black. The city also did not have data on 40 percent of recipients.

In comparison, the U.S. Census estimated in 2019 that the city’s population is 32 percent white, 14 percent Asian, 29 percent Hispanic or Latino and 24 percent Black.

email the author: news@queenspost.com

One Comment

Click for Comments 
Miggie Warms

Zip codes listed for Jackson Heights and Elmhurst are just WRONG. (Can’t comment on all the others due to lack of familiarity, but someone should look them up to see whether they are accurate.)

Reply

Leave a Comment
Reply to this Comment

All comments are subject to moderation before being posted.

This site is protected by reCAPTCHA and the Google Privacy Policy and Terms of Service apply.

Recent News

Man sought for allegedly groping a subway rider while she waited on a platform in Elmhurst: NYPD

Police from the 112th Precinct in Forest Hills and Transit District 20 are looking for a man, who is built like an NFL player, for allegedly groping a 50-year-old woman as she waited for the subway near the Queens Center Mall in Elmhurst on Monday morning.

The victim was standing on the southbound M/R platform at the 59th Avenue subway station on the Queens Boulevard line when a stranger approached her and touched her left buttocks, police said. The brute fled the scene on foot in an unknown direction. The woman was not injured during the incident.

AG’s office launches investigation into NYPD-involved fatal shooting near Roosevelt Avenue in Corona on Saturday morning

The New York Attorney General’s Office of Special Investigation (OSI) has launched a probe into the death of Jesus Alberto Nunez Reyes, 65, who was shot and killed during an encounter with NYPD officers in Corona on Saturday morning.

At approximately 4:09 a.m. on April 20, police officers responded to 39-21 103rd St., where they encountered Nunez Reyes allegedly holding a knife. The officers repeatedly commanded him to drop the knife, but Nunez Reyes did not comply, and an officer fired at him, the AG’s office said in a brief statement. Nunez Reyes was rushed to Elmhurst Hospital, where he was later pronounced dead. Officers recovered a knife at the scene.