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Critics Claim Murphy Administration Has Fumbled Covid Vaccine Rollout

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the staff of the Ridgewood blog

Trenton NJ, Governor Phil Murphy said at the March 22nd press conference , “So our dashboard is showing a current total of 3,510,311 doses. We’ve gotten another half-a-million shots into arms in just one week. And importantly, there have been a total of more than 2.3 million first doses administered by either the Pfizer or Moderna two-step vaccines or of the single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine. That means that we are roughly halfway to our goal of — initial goal — of vaccinating 4.7 million individuals. And by the way, more than 1.2 million of those who live, work and study in New Jersey are now fully vaccinated.”

In the mean time many residents are having difficulties getting vaccinations unless of coarse you are incarcerated at the Bergen County jail. 

CBS2’s Lisa Rozner reported on Monday , for weeks, Ramsey teacher Donna Carlin and her husband, Brian, who has a heart condition, tried to get a vaccine appointment through New Jersey’s online system.
“We did some at midnight. We did some at 6 in the morning. But we could never find an appointment,” Donna Carlin said.
But she is not alone.
Gov. Phil Murphy said Monday there are 700-plus sites, yet Donna and others who are eligible have only been able to secure an appointment through volunteers who monitor the sites 24/7.
So on Monday, Rozner asked Murphy, “Supply issues aside, it seems like the state’s online registry system isn’t that effective. Why is it an issue to get an appointment?”
“If you have not been able to get an appointment, and you’re anxious about that, we have nothing but sympathy and I promise you you’re going to get it. It may not be as soon as you’d like but that’s because we don’t have the supplies that we’d like,” Murphy responded.
Stats from Johns Hopkins University show in the Tri-State Area, Connecticut is leading the way in terms of percent of the population vaccinated. New York has vaccinated the most people — more than 2.5 million — compared to New Jersey and Connecticut.
“So how come New Jersey is still stuck at eligibility with 65 years and older?” Rozner asked.
“We’ve taken an approach that right now if you’re 65 and older you’re automatically eligible,” Murphy said. “If you’re under 65 and you have a chronic condition, you’ve been eligible since January. That continues to be the case.”

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