The stadium, which opened its doors as the city's newest COVID-19
vaccination hub, is the pride of the Bronx, the most recognizable
landmark in the borough that has struggled with one of the highest
death rates during the global coronavirus pandemic. The Bronx is
predominantly Black and Hispanic, communities that have suffered
higher infection and death rates.
With that in mind, city and state health authorities have pointedly
restricted to access to the stadium to eligible residents of the
Bronx, at least initially.
Jacqueline Soto, a 55-year-old school secretary from the Bronx
resident, was one of hundreds who lined up outside the towering
stadium. Members of the National Guard, dressed in camouflage,
tapped into iPads to check off names before allowing those with
appointments to enter.
"I was on a wait list for three weeks, desperate to get a vaccine,"
she said. "I was unsuccessful. But today I'm here. I just went on
the link yesterday and already I got the appointment today and I'm
happy to be here."
Dennis Flecha, 60, said he had been trying desperately to get a
vaccine since January and heard about the Yankee Stadium site that
morning on the news at home in the nearby Castle Hill neighborhood.
He arrived about 10 a.m., carrying a note from his doctor in his bag
explaining that because of his recent heart attacks and
hypertension, "He is very high risk."
He worried he might be mistaken for someone trying to get a shot
before others more deserving.
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"But if I get COVID, I'm not
going to survive," he said, speaking through two
masks looped on top of each other. After waiting
a couple of hours he received an appointment for
Monday afternoon, but still he worried it may
not come to pass. "I could still get kicked
out," he said.
Mayor Bill de Blasio toured the site, wearing a
New York Yankee cap for the occasion even though
the Boston native is a die-hard fan of the
archrival Red Sox.
"This is about equity," de Blasio said. "This is
about protecting people who need the most
protection because the Bronx is one of the
places that bore the brunt of this crisis of the
coronavirus."
The city has allocated 15,000 doses for the
first week, and some 13,000 appointments had
already been booked through next Friday to those
in eligible groups, including health workers,
some essential workers and people more than 65
years old.
Antonio Soto, a 60-year-old schoolteacher who is
married to Jacqueline, said he got concerned as
his appointment time passed as he was still
waiting in a line.
"At first I was scared," he said. "But once you
got in there, smooth sailing, everything was
beautiful."
(Reporting by Dan Fastenberg and Jonathan Allen
in New York; Additional reporting by Maria
Caspani; Editing by David Gregorio)
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