I don't know anyone who isn't a bit anxious about getting their vaccine. If they've had their first shot, they're worried about the second. If they're trying to sign up but are running into brick walls - as is happening to the 75+ cohort that started signing up in Massachusetts the other day - they're anxious about finding a place. If they're in a later cohort - as I am - they're concerned about whether the system will still be underperforming and overwhelmed when it's their turn to register. Everyone worries about supply lagging demand, even with well-delineated cohorts and timing. Everyone worries about whether some oddball, vaccine-resistant variant will spring up and we'll be back to Ground Zero.
Yes, we know they're out there. Non-frontline personnel who work in healthcare and found they could just flash their hospital ID and get in, whether they were eligible or not. People who knew someone who knew someone who was willing to do a bit of wink-wink-nudge-nudge for them. Wealthy folks managing to get their shots ahead of time by paying a premium at a concierge medical practice, which wouldn't be a problem to me - that's life - if the wealthy folks were in the CDC's recommended group, which is anyone 65 or up.
The couple apparently travelled from Vancouver to Whitehorse, before chartering a private plane to Beaver Creek.
It’s alleged they then went to the vaccine clinic in Beaver Creek, where the mobile vaccine team was administering Moderna doses vaccines to the isolated community of around 100 people, including members of the White River First Nation (WRFN).They then allegedly lied to officials at the clinic and represented themselves “in various ways” according to Community Services Minister John Streicker, whose portfolio includes CEMA [Civil Emergency Measures Act]. At the clinic they claimed to be workers at a local motel, he said. (Source: Yukon News)
At the clinic, that raised a few eyebrows. Apparently there was a wee bit of suspicion that they weren't your average local motel workers. I wonder why.
Both the Yukon Government and the leadership of the White River First Nation have expressed outrage over the scheme.
“We are deeply concerned by the actions of individuals who put our Elders and vulnerable people at risk to jump the line for selfish purposes,” said WRFN Chief Angela Demit, in a statement...
Streicker said they put the community at risk by breaking quarantine, disregarding the declaration they signed on their arrival and travelling to the remote community. He also questioned the logic of their deception — wondering how they thought they would receive the second dose.
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