Health Care

Eight governors call on feds to immediately send out vaccine doses now in reserve

Getty Images

A group of eight governors is calling on the Trump administration to release coronavirus vaccine doses that are currently being held in reserve to states that request them immediately.

The Trump administration’s current strategy is to hold back half of the available doses of vaccine to ensure that there is enough supply for everyone who gets the first dose to get a second dose. 

But the governors, all Democrats, say that it does not make sense to have vaccine sitting in freezers, and the reserved doses should be distributed, with the confidence that enough doses will be manufactured to provide for second doses down the line.

“While some of these life-saving vaccines are sitting in Pfizer freezers, our nation is losing 2,661 Americans each day, according to the latest seven-day average,” the governors wrote in a letter to Secretary of Health and Human Services Alex Azar and Gen. Gustave Perna of Operation Warp Speed. “The failure to distribute these doses to states who request them is unconscionable and unacceptable. We demand that the federal government begin distributing these reserved doses to states immediately.”

The governors signing the letter are Michigan’s Gretchen Whitmer, California’s Gavin Newsom, Kansas’s Laura Kelly, Illinois’s J.B. Pritzker, Minnesota’s Tim Walz, New York’s Andrew Cuomo, Washington’s Jay Inslee, and Wisconsin’s Tony Evers. 

The Trump administration, though, indicated that it is not going to change its strategy of holding second doses in reserve, and responded that states have not administered all of the doses they have received already.

“Operation Warp Speed is continuing to ensure second doses are available to vaccine administration sites, at appropriate intervals, as directed by jurisdiction leaders,” a Department of Health and Human Services spokesperson said. “We would be delighted to learn that jurisdictions have actually administered many more doses than they are presently reporting.”

The Trump administration is encouraging states to expand the categories of people eligible for the vaccine doses as a way to speed up the process and ensure tight criteria are not slowing it down. 

The back and forth between the states and the federal government comes as the initial vaccine rollout has gone slower than expected. So far, about 6 million out of roughly 21 million doses distributed have been administered, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.

Tags Andrew Cuomo Coronavirus COVID-19 Gavin Newsom governors Gretchen Whitmer Jay Inslee second dose Tim Walz Tony Evers Vaccine

Copyright 2023 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.