Jacobson calls for permanent vaccination sites in Newburgh, Poughkeepsie, and simpler signup process

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ALBANY – State Assemblyman Jonathan Jacobson (D, Newburgh) is calling on the state to establish permanent COVID-19 vaccination sites in the cities of Newburgh and Poughkeepsie and to simplify the state’s signup process that he called “haphazard and frustrating.”

“Last month, I called for a permanent government-run vaccination site in my district. Since then, the state established a pop-up site at the Newburgh Armory and another at Beulah Baptist Church in the City of Poughkeepsie. Pop-up sites are well and good, but residents need reliability and consistency.”

  The lawmaker noted the cities of Newburgh and Poughkeepsie are two of the hardest-hit areas in the Hudson Valley. “Establishing permanent vaccination sites in these cities will go a long way to addressing the Newburgh micro-cluster and help the many black and Latino residents of both cities who lack cars and who have been disproportionately impacted by COVID-19.”

  Jacobson also said there has been “too much confusion surrounding the how, when, and where New Yorkers can sign up” to get vaccinated.

“Appointments are filled within minutes of being announced, leaving residents who are eligible to receive the vaccine unable to make an appointment and unsure of the steps they need to take to obtain one,” he said.

  “The Biden administration has done a tremendous job accelerating vaccine production. Our job is to make sure those doses get to the people who need them,” Jacobson said. “We need a user-friendly system where eligible residents can sign up either by phone or online and receive an alert when an appointment is available within a reasonable geographical radius.”




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