Tag Archives: feds

Feds arrest CA homeopath for selling COVID pellets, fake CDC vaccine cards

Enlarge / Vials containing pills for homeopathic remedies are displayed at Ainsworths Pharmacy on August 26, 2005, in London.

Federal prosecutors have arrested a homeopathy practitioner for an alleged scheme involving sham COVID-19 immunization pellets and falsified COVID-19 vaccination record cards, the Department of Justice announced Wednesday.

Juli Mazi, 41, of Napa, California, allegedly sold unproven and potentially dangerous vials of pellets for $243 in some cases that she fraudulently claimed could provide “lifelong immunity” to COVID-19. What the pellets actually are or contain is unclear. One person who spoke with federal investigators said they became ill after taking the pellets. In Mazi’s sales pitches, she said that the pellets contain a “very minute amount of this [COVID-19] disease,” while fraudulently claiming that FDA-authorized COVID-19 vaccines contain “toxic ingredients.”

Along with the mystery pellets, Mazi allegedly provided customers with Centers for Disease Control and Prevention vaccination cards, which she either partly filled out or left blank. She instructed customers to write on the card that they had received a Moderna mRNA COVID-19 vaccine and then date the immunization as the time they took their pellets—or a date that would otherwise not raise suspicion. Mazi even provided customers with Moderna vaccine lot numbers, which the CDC confirmed were real lot numbers for Moderna vaccines. The lot numbers corresponded to vaccine supplies distributed in the Napa area, of which none were allocated to Mazi, who is not federally authorized to receive or administer COVID-19 vaccines.

“This defendant allegedly defrauded and endangered the public by preying on fears and spreading misinformation about FDA-authorized vaccinations, while also peddling fake treatments that put people’s lives at risk,” Deputy Attorney General Lisa O. Monaco said in a statement. “Even worse, the defendant allegedly created counterfeit COVID-19 vaccination cards and instructed her customers to falsely mark that they had received a vaccine, allowing them to circumvent efforts to contain the spread of the disease.”

Bunkum

Federal authorities first learned of Mazi’s alleged scheme after taking a call from a tipster in April of this year. The tipster said that their family had bought the pellets and received falsified CDC vaccination cards. The tipster went ahead and purchased their own batch of pellets and had a phone-based appointment with Mazi in June, which the tipster recorded with Mazi’s consent. During the call, Mazi provided instructions for taking the pellets and fraudulently filling out the CDC vaccination card.

According to a transcript of the call, which was included in a federal affidavit, Mazi instructed the tipster to:

pour roughly two to four pellets from the [vial’s] cap, and dump that under your tongue. You do not have to drive yourself insane trying to pour exactly the four pellets. The exact number of pellets, it does not matter. I mean it is like an energy medicine, so more pellets do not mean stronger necessary[sic].

When the tipster asked what was in the pellets, Mazi replied:

[t]his is from the COVID-19… It is made from the disease particles themselves. I do not know the exact process for that… As long as they can extract germs of the virus, they can make the remedy. With this method, we are tapping into what is known as the innate-immune system. That is like our higher intelligence part of the immune system.

Mazi’s responses are incoherent and concerning. For one thing, real vaccines are intended to induce long-term adaptive immune responses, such as antibody production, which are distinct from the innate immune system.

A federal investigator on the case spoke with a medical expert at the National Institutes of Health to review some of Mazi’s statements. In regard to her claim that her pellets provided “lifelong immunity” to COVID-19, the expert said it is “absolutely a false statement.” The expert also dismissed Mazi’s claim that FDA-authorized vaccines contain toxic ingredients. On the other hand, the expert noted that having people swallow pellets potentially containing SARS-CoV-2 virus particles—if that’s what they actually contain—is very dangerous. While Mazi’s claims are troubling, they are in line with the types of claims made by other homeopaths.

Fraud and profits

Homeopathy is a debunked pseudoscience that claims highly diluted toxic substances can cure diseases and that the dilution increases their disease-curing powers (aka, “like cures like” and the “law of infinitesimals”). Most of the “treatments” are so diluted they contain only water. As such, some homeopaths claim that water molecules can somehow remember other molecules they’ve encountered and act accordingly.

Though homeopaths’ watery treatments are typically harmless, they can become quite dangerous if they are improperly diluted. That was the case for homeopathic teething products found to contain unsafe levels of a plant-derived poison called belladonna, aka, deadly nightshade. The teething products were linked in 2016 to 10 deaths and more than 400 illnesses in babies and infants.

According to federal investigators, Mazi told her customers that her COVID-19 pellets were also safe for babies. Investigating her practice further, they found she had provided other kinds of homeopathic “immunizations” to children, which she falsely claimed would satisfy the immunization requirements for California schools.

According to financial records federal investigators obtained from Square—a digital payment company that processed credit card payments—Mazi received approximately $221,817 from 1,242 transactions between January 2020 to May 21, 2021. Though the vast majority of the transaction records did not note what the payments were for, 25 transactions amounting to $7,653 were indicated as being for COVID treatments, and approximately 34 other transactions were noted as being for homeoprophylaxis treatment.

For her COVID-related business, Mazi has been charged with one count of wire fraud and one count of false statements related to health care matters.

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Gold investors call Fed’s inflation bluff

Gold investors are taking the wheel, setting the precious metal up for a major rally as investors realize the Federal Reserve is powerless against rising and persistent inflation, according to one strategist.

The precious metal on Thursday was flirting with a sixth straight day of gains, hovering near $1,800 an ounce. It has rallied 8.5% since touching a nine-month low of $1,677.70 an ounce on March 8.

“Markets are basically preparing for the wrong outcome,” said Peter Schiff, CEO and president of Westport, Connecticut-based Euro Pacific Capital.

Schiff says markets are finally starting to come to the conclusion that “inflation is not transitory,” and is a problem the Federal Reserve will try to solve with rate hikes and tapering.  

FORGET INFLATION – DEFLATION COULD REAR ITS UGLY HEAD SOON

Investors have begun pricing in tighter monetary policy, and therefore a weaker economy, by buying U.S. dollars and Treasurys. 

The dollar this week hit a three-month high against a basket of its peers heavily weighted in favor of the euro. This as the 10-year yield fell to 1.25%, or -95 basis points when adjusted for inflation, both of which were the lowest since February.  

Source: FactSet (Real Yield); Gold (Dow Jones Market Data)

At the same time, investors have been unloading their bets on inflation and economic growth, like commodities and cyclical stocks, in anticipation the Fed will successfully fend off the bout of inflation it says is temporary.

But the tide is turning against the Fed’s narrative that inflation is transitory.

International Monetary Fund managing director Kristalina Georgieva warned that additional fiscal support could “further fuel inflationary pressures” and cause the Fed to raise rates earlier than expected.

Schiff says the Fed knows inflation isn’t transitory and that central bank has been pushing that narrative because it is in “no position” to fight higher prices as it looks to support the labor market and the economy.

FOOD AND BEVERAGE GIANTS SOUND INFLATION ALARM

“When the markets figure this out, that’s when gold is really going to take off,” he added.

Analysts at Goldman Sachs said in a note sent to clients on Tuesday that gold has “material upside” should the global recovery not play out as expected and inflation increases “significantly above expectations.”

In that scenario, the firm says gold could reach $2,300 an ounce, or $300 more than in its base-case scenario.

Meanwhile, strategists at Bank of America say a pickup in inflation should “bring new buyers into the market,” but worry that tighter monetary policy will keep the precious metal range bound. They lowered their 2021 target to $1,828 from $1,843 while holding their 2022 target at $1,850.

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Not everyone is calling for higher gold prices.

Adam Hoyes, an assistant economist at London-based Capital Economics, anticipates higher inflation in the years ahead but warns “long-dated real yields in the U.S. will rise significantly,” serving as a headwind for gold.

He sees gold’s price falling to $1,550 per ounce by the end of 2022.

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Activision Blizzard’s Overwatch League Investigated By Feds

Image: Robert Paul / Activision Blizzard / DoJ / Kotaku

The U.S. Department of Justice is looking into the Overwatch League’s soft salary cap policy that punishes teams who pay players too much, according to a new report by Dot Esports.

The investigation is being headed up by the Civil Conduct Task Force, part of the department’s antitrust division. According to Dot Esports, regulators are looking into whether the Overwatch League’s secret soft cap on salaries violates the 1890 Sherman Antitrust Act because the players aren’t unionized. While the investigation isn’t criminal, Dot Esports reports that “several former Overwatch League employees” have already been interviewed by Justice Department officials and that current Activision Blizzard employees have been instructed by the company to not “tamper with or destroy information regarding player salaries.”

The Justice Department and Activision Blizzard did not immediately respond to a request for comment by Kotaku.

“We have received an inquiry from the Department of Justice and are cooperating accordingly,” a spokesperson for Activision Blizzard told Dot Esports. “We deliver epic entertainment to our fans and support our players and teams in producing the most competitive and enjoyable esports leagues in the world.”

A “competitive balance tax” in the Overwatch League was first reported by Dexerto in 2019, but has never been publicly acknowledged by Activision Blizzard. According to Dot Esports, the soft salary cap per team in 2020 was $1.6 million. For every dollar franchises like the San Francisco Shock, Shanghai Dragons, and London Spitfire paid over that amount, they had to pay an equal additional amount to the league to be redistributed back to the other teams. While in theory this would help keep the league balanced in terms of team spending, it would also discourage teams from offering more competitive salaries to players.

News of the Justice Department’s investigation comes in the middle of the Overwatch League’s 2021 regular season, with playoffs set to begin next month. Most of the matches have been played offline due to the ongoing pandemic. Teams are currently competing in qualifiers for the mid-season Summer Showdown tournament.

The news has already kickstarted a new debate over unionization in epsorts, something pro Overwatch players might want to reconsider ahead of the next transfer window.

 

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These Text Messages Pointed the Feds to Matt Gaetz

In late January 2020, U.S. Secret Service agents received information that Rep. Matt Gaetz had accompanied a Florida county tax official they were already investigating on an unusual nighttime visit to a government office—where the local official was allegedly making fake IDs, a source close to the investigation told The Daily Beast.

That tip to the feds came in a text message conversation that Seminole County Tax Collector Joel Greenberg had with an employee explaining why they were both in the office one weekend two years earlier, according to this person.

A timestamp visible in the text message thread indicated the conversation took place on Monday, April 16, 2018.

According to three people with direct knowledge of the incident: Greenberg visited the Lake Mary, Florida branch of his tax collection agency that weekend. Grainy surveillance footage captured Greenberg standing near a manager’s desk with another man. Greenberg forgot to set the alarm on the way out, which concerned the assistant branch manager when she walked into the office Monday morning. That employee was surprised to find that drivers’ licenses—which are normally turned in when expired at the tax office for shredding—were scattered all over the desk instead of in the appropriate disposal basket. She reviewed the camera footage and alerted her boss, who in turn contacted Greenberg via text.

“Did you happen to visit the Lake Mary Office on the weekend?” the text message read.

The image obtained by The Daily Beast shows that Greenberg allegedly responded, “Yes I was showing congressman Gaetz what our operation looked like. Did I leave something on?”

The Daily Beast obtained images of additional text messages that purport to show Greenberg helping Gaetz get duplicate IDs—outside of proper channels on a Sunday afternoon. On Sept. 2, 2018, Greenberg directly asked an employee to quickly create a new card that complies with the heightened security standards of “REAL ID,” a process that would normally require providing additional documentation, according to the images.

“Amy- is there anyway to assist one of our Congressmen in getting an emergency replacement ID or DL by Tuesday 2pm? His was lost yesterday and he’s got a flight Tuesday. Doesn’t have any other form of ID currently on him. Sorry to bother you on Sunday,” Greenberg wrote.

Greenberg then confirmed that the favor was for “Matthew Louis Gaetz II,” born on May 7, 1982.

When Greenberg later came under investigation by the Secret Service for identity theft and stalking, agents approached former employees at the tax office to obtain proof of the public official’s activities. That’s when they were suddenly directed to Gaetz.

According to the source who provided the text message conversation, who spoke on condition of anonymity to guarantee their safety, Secret Service agents directed them in the final days of January 2020 to print out the full text message conversation with Greenberg from online AT&T records. That source said those text messages were delivered to the Secret Service, Florida Department of Law Enforcement, and most recently, another federal agency.

Gaetz, a Florida Republican, is now the target of a Justice Department investigation that is focusing on allegations that the Republican congressman and Greenberg recruited young women and paid them for sex, according to The New York Times.

CNN first reported the existence of text messages on Thursday. The Orlando Sentinel confirmed their existence as well.

On Wednesday, The Daily Beast attempted to file a public records request to obtain a copy of the video surveillance that is believed to show Gaetz with Greenberg on that weekend in April 2018. However, a Seminole County representative indicated that the video is unavailable because the government agency has a policy of deleting all surveillance footage after 60 days. County officials would not comment on what exactly employees have told federal investigators about their recollection of the incident.

The Daily Beast also attempted to reach the former employee who interacted with Greenberg via text message, but was unsuccessful. That employee eventually signed a $50,000 settlement with the Office of the Seminole County Tax Collector over claims of unfair retaliation at work after Greenberg allegedly used a circle of personal friends he hired at the agency to harass and intimidate her and her family. That settlement bars her from “false or defamatory statements” about her former employer but importantly does not prevent her from speaking to government investigators, according to a copy obtained by The Daily Beast.

Her attorney, Daniel A. Pérez, declined to comment on any current efforts to assist federal law enforcement.

The U.S. Attorney’s Office for the Middle District of Florida would not confirm the existence of an ongoing investigation into Gaetz.

Prosecutors there do have an ongoing case against Greenberg, who came under federal scrutiny after he repeatedly angered fellow county officials with his bizarre, erratic behavior.

According to people familiar with the investigation, Secret Service agents were initially interested in Greenberg’s failed attempt to allow Seminole County residents to pay their taxes in Bitcoin. Attorneys have revealed in court that the federal probe quietly began by April 2019. That began to heat up when Greenberg ran for re-election and faced political opposition from a fine arts teacher at Trinity Preparatory School.

Federal agents arrested him at his Lake Mary home on June 17, 2020, and the case initially hinged on accusations that Greenberg had set up fake online profiles to defame the teacher and had sent several letters to the school with lurid accusations that his opponent had engaged in sexual misconduct with a student.

As of Tuesday, that case has now vastly expanded to a 33-count indictment that includes a diverse list of crimes that range from wire fraud to sex trafficking. Investigators say Greenberg recruited at least one teenager between 14 and 17 years old to engage in a “commercial sex act” between May and November 2017 in Central Florida and elsewhere.

Investigators also say that Greenberg used his privileged access to Florida’s drivers’ license database to look up private information on “individuals” with whom he “was engaged in ‘sugar-daddy’ relationships.”

Additionally, Greenberg is also accused of making fake IDs—potentially explaining why the 2018 surveillance footage raised concerns that led to that text message conversation handed to investigators.

The Daily Beast obtained text messages handed to federal investigators that allegedly show Greenberg acknowledging that he visited the office on the weekend of August 4, 2018, where there were drivers’ licenses “scattered across the desks and not put away in an organized manner.”

Greenberg has maintained a close relationship with Gaetz for several years. Both were rising stars in Florida’s Republican Party in 2016. They have taken selfies together with political operative Roger Stone in 2017, at AIPAC in 2018, and at the White House in 2019. Gaetz publicly lent his support to Greenberg, cheering him as “a disrupter” who should run for Congress.

They were also together in the Florida panhandle region on July 5, 2019 when they called a state legislator, Rep. Anna V. Eskamani, and left her a peculiar voicemail that has been obtained by The Daily Beast.

“My dear Anna, this is your favorite tax collector. I’m up in the panhandle with your favorite U.S. congressman, Mr. Gaetz,” Greenberg starts to say.

“Hi Anna!” Gaetz jumps in.

“And, uh, we were just chatting about you, and talking about your lovely qualities,” Greenberg continued.

“We think you’re the future of the Democratic Party in Florida!” Gaetz said.

On Thursday, Eskamani told The Daily Beast that she kept Greenberg at arm’s length for years. Their interactions started when she called him out over Islamaphobic comments and then helped him connect with the Muslim community to recover from that. Eskamani said she cautiously entertained “weird” contacts from Greenberg and Gaetz that made her uncomfortable.

“We were not friends. We never hung out. We didn’t talk ever, really. I just played nice. For so many women you’re either very blunt and be called a bitch, or you try to play nice and pivot and deflate,” she said.



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Schumer: Feds will help CNY get more people vaccinated, ease back restrictions

Editor’s Note: This story and the headline have been updated after an aide for Sen. Schumer clarified comments he made at an event in Syracuse Tuesday.

Syracuse, N.Y. — Within a month, the federal government will bolster vaccine distribution in Central New York in an effort to get more people vaccinated and roll back restrictions on eligibility, according to U.S. Sen. Chuck Schumer.

“The federal government is taking over vaccines, because when the state and localities have done it, they haven’t had enough, enough information,” Schumer said in Syracuse Tuesday. “The federal government, within a month, will set up centers all over Central New York that will remove all these requirements and people can just line up and get the vaccines.”

An aide to Schumer said afterward it’s not yet certain that new vaccination centers will be opened, but the federal money will supplement resources and vaccine supply at the existing locations, run by the state and the county. Eligibility restrictions won’t be eliminated, but a greater supply will mean speeding along the easing of who can get it.

Schumer said money to supplement local vaccine sites is included in the $1.9 trillion Covid relief bill recently passed by the Senate. The bill includes $4 billion for Covid-19 vaccine procurement and testing.

“When it goes through the state… they have too many requirements,” he said. “ ‘Oh you’ll be 65 in three months? Forget it. Go home.’ That kind of thing.”

Vaccinations are currently limited to people who meet certain criteria. That can include age requirements, pre-existing conditions or the nature of someone’s job. Teachers and nurses, for example, can get the vaccine, regardless of their age or health status.

Schumer’s said he hopes enough people will be vaccinated by June that some parts of normal life can return.

Schumer’s comments came the same day as Gov. Andrew Cuomo expanded eligibility for the vaccine to include people 60 year of age and older and some more “essential” public workers.

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Feds on high alert Thursday after warnings about potential threats to US Capitol

The joint warning from the FBI and the Department of Homeland Security on Tuesday underscores a broader effort by federal agencies to avoid repeating the mistakes made ahead of January 6, when officers were overtaken by a violent pro-Trump mob that stormed the Capitol. Those intelligence sharing and planning failures have been laid bare over the last two months in several hearings and have been a focal point of criticism from lawmakers investigating the violent attack that left several people dead.

The violent extremists also discussed plans to persuade thousands to travel to Washington, DC, to participate in the March 4 plot, according to the joint intelligence bulletin.

One source noted to CNN that it is mostly online talk and not necessarily an indication anyone is coming to Washington to act on it.

Some of the conspiracy theorists believe that the former President will be inaugurated on March 4, according to the joint bulletin. Between 1793 and 1933, inauguration often fell on March 4 or a surrounding date.

US Capitol Police acting chief Yogananda Pittman told Congress earlier Wednesday that her department had “concerning intelligence” regarding the next few days in Congress — but said it wouldn’t be “prudent” of her to share the “law-enforcement sensitive” intelligence in a public hearing or public format.

Pittman assured lawmakers, though, that her department is in an “enhanced” security posture and that the National Guard and Capitol Police have been briefed on what to expect in the coming days.

Increased communication

There has been a concerted effort among federal agencies to communicate the possible threats ahead of March 4 in a way they failed to do before January 6.

The effort to improve preparation extends to communicating with state and local officials. DHS held a call Wednesday with state and local law enforcement officials from around the country to discuss current threats posed by domestic extremists, including concerns about potential violence surrounding March 4 and beyond, according to two sources familiar with the matter.

While specific details from the call remain unclear, both sources said the overarching message from DHS officials is that addressing threats posed by domestic extremists requires increased communication and intelligence sharing across federal and state and local entities, as well as a shift in how law enforcement officials interpret the information they receive.

In a clear sign federal agencies are working to avoid the same communication failures for which they have been roundly criticized since the Capitol attack, DHS officials are stressing that law enforcement should not view intelligence solely through the lens of whether a threat qualifies as “credible and specific,” but use the warnings coming from DHS, FBI and other partner agencies to inform decisions about their security posture, even if the information provided falls short of pointing to an imminent attack or violence, the sources said.

Federal officials are emphasizing the point that gaps in intelligence sharing left law enforcement unprepared for the chaos that unfolded on January 6, even though they were notified of potential violence days before the attack, and that going forward, bulletins issued by DHS and FBI indicate a threat is serious enough to be communicated to relevant entities, even if the intelligence is based primarily on online chatter or other less definitive indicators, the sources said.

DHS acting intelligence chief Melissa Smislova testified Wednesday that DHS is “completely dissatisfied” with the results of the department’s “efforts leading up to January 6th.”

She told lawmakers that the department is re-examining how it distributes information and coordinates with partners. “We thought that it was sufficient and clearly it was not,” she said.

“We will do better,” she added.

Homeland Secretary Alejandro Mayorkas has called on the department to evaluate its operational posture at the tactical and strategic level, specifically the ability to respond to a potential emerging situation within the Capital region, a US official told CNN.

Election fraud conspiracies

Perceived election fraud and other conspiracy theories associated with the presidential transition may contribute to violence with little or no warning, according to the bulletin, which is part of a series of intelligence products to highlight potential domestic violent extremist threats to the Washington, DC, region.

“Given that the Capitol complex is currently fortified like a military installation, I don’t anticipate any successful attacks against the property,” said Brian Harrell, the former assistant secretary for infrastructure protection at DHS. “However, all threats should be taken seriously and investigations launched against those who would call for violence. We continue to see far-right extremist groups that are fueled by misinformation and conspiracy theories quickly become the most dangerous threat to society.”

In the current environment, “You really cannot underestimate the potential that an individual or a small group of individuals will engage in violence because they believe a false narrative that they’re seeing online,” the US official said.

The false narrative of a stolen election is still drawing the attention of domestic extremists, the official said, adding that there are people “in the domestic extremist world who are calling for acts of violence in response to that narrative.”

Although March 4 is a concern to law enforcement, it’s not a “standalone event,” the official said; rather, it’s part of a “continuum of violence” based domestic extremist conspiracy theories.

“It’s a threat that continues to be of concern to law enforcement. And I suspect that we are going to have to be focused on it for months to come,” the official said.

The bulletin also notes that militia extremists “have allegedly threatened an attack against the US Capitol using explosives to kill as many members of Congress as possible during the upcoming State of the Union address, according to (the) US Capitol Police Chief.”

Pittman warned last month that militia groups involved in the January 6 insurrection want to “blow up the Capitol” and “kill as many members as possible” when President Joe Biden addresses a joint session of Congress.

At the time, Pittman said law enforcement remains concerned about threats by known militia groups “with a direct nexus to the State of the Union” address.

CNN’s Whitney Wild and Jim Sciutto contributed to this report.

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Greensboro picked by feds for large-scale COVID-19 vaccine site

The federal government announced plans Friday to pilot the launch of a large-scale COVID-19 vaccination site in Greensboro.The site, Community Vaccination Center, which plans to operate seven days a week for eight weeks, would be capable of administering about 3,000 shots a day, and up to 21,000 doses a week.The site will be located at the Four Seasons Town Centre shopping mall, located at 410 Four Seasons Town Centre, and is expected to be up and running by March 10.”It’s a great day for Guilford County,” said Skip Alston, chairman of the Guilford County Board of Commissioners. Alston said he and other elected leaders have been working for weeks to advocate for more COVID-19 vaccination resources to come from the federal and state governments to Guilford County. He said Guilford County is located in an ideal location for a mass vaccination site because of its accessibility from surrounding counties.”We’re going to make sure we welcome (FEMA) with open arms,” he said by Zoom Friday afternoon.The federal government will provide the center’s vaccine supply, which will be in addition to North Carolina’s weekly allotment from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.Another pilot site is being launched in Chicago.The White House said it will deploy federal teams immediately to work with state and local jurisdictions with the vaccine distribution.Officials said the site will act as a “hub” with additional supporting vaccination centers — or “spokes” — reaching nearby communities. “Spoke” locations will be determined by the state. “Spokes” from the Greensboro location may be fixed or mobile centers, depending on the state’s decision. The site was identified using a range of criteria, most central to those is the CDC’s Social Vulnerability Index. The tool was created to help emergency response planners and public health officials identify and map communities that will most likely need support before, during, and after a hazardous event. The index takes into consideration critical data points, including socioeconomic status, household composition, minority status, languages, housing type and transportation. “We know that a lot of marginalized communities can’t get through on computers, book appointments or get through online,” Alston said. “It puts the African American community, minorities communities and marginalized communities at a disadvantage.”Site considerations for the Four Seasons Town Centre location included adequate parking and access to public transportation. The Greensboro Transit Agency public transportation system serves the Greensboro, High Point and Winston-Salem areas. The goal of establishing these joint federal pilot centers is to continue to expand the rate of vaccinations in an efficient, effective and equitable manner, with an explicit focus on making sure that communities with a high risk of COVID-19 exposure and infection are not left behind.North Carolinians will be able to schedule appointments at the site through the state and local vaccination scheduling portals, and eligibility requirements will mirror those of state and local requirements. “This federally supported vaccine center will help North Carolina get more shots in arms and assist us in reaching more underserved communities,” North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper said.The Community Vaccination Center will also feature options for drive-thru service in the parking lot and walk-in service in the space formerly occupied by Dillard’s department store. Guilford County Commissioner for District 5 Carly Cooke said she and other county leaders have pushed to ensure the state and federal government know Greensboro and Guilford County are capable of not only efficiently distributing the vaccine but is targeting underserved families in their outreach.”Guilford County staff and Cone Health have made that a focus and have done a great job of reaching out into communities that are traditionally underserved and making sure that they are receiving apppointments and opportunities to get the vaccine,” she said. “This is exciting news.”To reach more marginalized and underserved communities, the main vaccination center at Four Seasons Town Centre will support additional sites and mobile vaccination clinics in communities of need across the Piedmont Triad. Alston said efforts to reach underserved communities will continue through efforts with churches and other community groups. “Thousands of North Carolinians will be able to access vaccines as result of this local, state, and federal partnership,” state Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mandy Cohen said. “We appreciate everyone working together to focus on getting vaccines to our underserved communities.”

The federal government announced plans Friday to pilot the launch of a large-scale COVID-19 vaccination site in Greensboro.

The site, Community Vaccination Center, which plans to operate seven days a week for eight weeks, would be capable of administering about 3,000 shots a day, and up to 21,000 doses a week.

The site will be located at the Four Seasons Town Centre shopping mall, located at 410 Four Seasons Town Centre, and is expected to be up and running by March 10.

“It’s a great day for Guilford County,” said Skip Alston, chairman of the Guilford County Board of Commissioners.

Alston said he and other elected leaders have been working for weeks to advocate for more COVID-19 vaccination resources to come from the federal and state governments to Guilford County. He said Guilford County is located in an ideal location for a mass vaccination site because of its accessibility from surrounding counties.

“We’re going to make sure we welcome (FEMA) with open arms,” he said by Zoom Friday afternoon.

The federal government will provide the center’s vaccine supply, which will be in addition to North Carolina’s weekly allotment from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Another pilot site is being launched in Chicago.

The White House said it will deploy federal teams immediately to work with state and local jurisdictions with the vaccine distribution.

Officials said the site will act as a “hub” with additional supporting vaccination centers — or “spokes” — reaching nearby communities.

“Spoke” locations will be determined by the state. “Spokes” from the Greensboro location may be fixed or mobile centers, depending on the state’s decision.

The site was identified using a range of criteria, most central to those is the CDC’s Social Vulnerability Index. The tool was created to help emergency response planners and public health officials identify and map communities that will most likely need support before, during, and after a hazardous event.

The index takes into consideration critical data points, including socioeconomic status, household composition, minority status, languages, housing type and transportation.

“We know that a lot of marginalized communities can’t get through on computers, book appointments or get through online,” Alston said. “It puts the African American community, minorities communities and marginalized communities at a disadvantage.”

Site considerations for the Four Seasons Town Centre location included adequate parking and access to public transportation.

The Greensboro Transit Agency public transportation system serves the Greensboro, High Point and Winston-Salem areas.

The goal of establishing these joint federal pilot centers is to continue to expand the rate of vaccinations in an efficient, effective and equitable manner, with an explicit focus on making sure that communities with a high risk of COVID-19 exposure and infection are not left behind.

North Carolinians will be able to schedule appointments at the site through the state and local vaccination scheduling portals, and eligibility requirements will mirror those of state and local requirements.

“This federally supported vaccine center will help North Carolina get more shots in arms and assist us in reaching more underserved communities,” North Carolina Gov. Roy Cooper said.

The Community Vaccination Center will also feature options for drive-thru service in the parking lot and walk-in service in the space formerly occupied by Dillard’s department store.

Guilford County Commissioner for District 5 Carly Cooke said she and other county leaders have pushed to ensure the state and federal government know Greensboro and Guilford County are capable of not only efficiently distributing the vaccine but is targeting underserved families in their outreach.

“Guilford County staff and Cone Health have made that a focus and have done a great job of reaching out into communities that are traditionally underserved and making sure that they are receiving apppointments and opportunities to get the vaccine,” she said. “This is exciting news.”

To reach more marginalized and underserved communities, the main vaccination center at Four Seasons Town Centre will support additional sites and mobile vaccination clinics in communities of need across the Piedmont Triad.

Alston said efforts to reach underserved communities will continue through efforts with churches and other community groups.

“Thousands of North Carolinians will be able to access vaccines as result of this local, state, and federal partnership,” state Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Dr. Mandy Cohen said. “We appreciate everyone working together to focus on getting vaccines to our underserved communities.”

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Pelosi issues ‘rare rebuke’ after Cuomo claims feds trying to shortchange NY in coronavirus bill: reports

House Speaker Nancy Pelosi apparently isn’t buying New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s claim that congressional Democrats’ proposed coronavirus aid package would not provide enough relief to the Empire State.

The speaker this week sent a letter to New York’s congressional Democrats, touting the federal proposal’s $50 billion in state and local funding for New York as well as $20 billion to “support families’ health, financial security and well-being.”

The proposed amount far exceeds the $15 billion the governor has repeatedly said the state needs to close New York’s budget gap, according to the Times Union of Albany, N.Y., which covers the state’s capital region. The newspaper said it obtained a copy of Pelosi’s letter.

“We sadly observe over 1.5 million coronavirus cases, nearly 45,000 deaths, and hundreds of thousands of job losses in New York,” Pelosi writes. “Please know that your concerns are being addressed in ways that you have advanced and with the enthusiastic advocacy of Leader Chuck Schumer and Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand.”

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The Times Union called the letter a “rare rebuke” from Pelosi who is usually closely aligned with Cuomo.  

The proposed aid, which would include more than $12 billion for schools, $8 billion for transit and $3 billion for Medicaid, would likely help avert possible budget cuts Cuomo had threatened, according to the New York Daily News.

New York House Democrats had sent a letter to Pelosi two days earlier asking for adequate funding and Cuomo sent a letter to state lawmakers last week demanding at least $15 billion in direct relief, according to the Times Union.

Cuomo reiterated the $15 billion figure this week when a legislative breakdown reportedly showed New York would receive only around $12.7 billion in direct funding to the state’s government. 

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Pelosi’s letter arrived Thursday, a day before Cuomo and other governors met with President Biden to discuss the Democrats’ $1.9 trillion aid package.

After the meeting, Cuomo, chair of the National Governors Association, in a joint letter with vice-chair Arkansas Gov. Asa Hutchinson, said, “The President and his team made clear that they recognize and appreciate how critical this targeted relief is for our ability to recover from this pandemic,” according to the Buffalo News.

Republicans have been critical of Democrats’ relief plan, which may pass along party lines. New York Republican Tom Reed claimed it prioritizes the “far left over bipartisan compromise,” according to the Time Union. 

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The governor’s office pointed the Times Union to the statement on the White House meeting after the newspaper’s requested comment over Pelosi’s letter.

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