Vaccines

Winter Storm Won't Stop Vaccine Deliveries, State and Federal Officials Say

“This is FedEx, this is UPS express shipping. They know how to deal with snow and bad weather. But we are on it and following it,” HHS Secretary Azar said

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Snow continued to fall Thursday during a key period in the coronavirus pandemic, days after the start of the U.S. vaccination campaign and in the thick of a virus surge that has throngs of people seeking tests daily.

Snow fell from northern Virginia to parts of New England on Wednesday. It carried on north into the evening, sustaining a storm that was poised to drop as much as 2 feet of snow in some places by Thursday.

Officials said they didn’t expect the winter blast to disrupt vaccine distribution, which began Monday for frontline health care workers.

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U.S. Health and Human Services Secretary Alex Azar said Wednesday that the government is tracking the vaccine shipments precisely, has staffers already in place to receive them and believes the companies transporting them can navigate the storm.

“This is FedEx, this is UPS express shipping. They know how to deal with snow and bad weather. But we are on it and following it,” he told Fox News Channel’s “Fox & Friends.”

The need for vaccines prompted New Jersey Gov. Phil Murphy to exempt vaccine delivery trucks from a storm-related prohibition on commercial traffic on some highways. The state was anticipating more than two dozen vaccine deliveries in the next day or two.

The storm brought an overabundance of hazards from the mid-Atlantic to the Northeast, including sleet, freezing rain and ice around Philadelphia and in the Washington, D.C. area, heavy snow in New York City and Connecticut, and strong winds and bitter cold throughout New England.

The heaviest snowfall was expected in central Pennsylvania, where forecasters in the state capital of Harrisburg said a six-decade-old record for a December snowfall could potentially be broken. The National Weather Service reported that parts of Centre County were hit with as much as 13 inches (33 centimeters) of snow by Wednesday night.

A Spirit Airline plane arriving from Las Vegas slid off a taxiway at Baltimore–Washington International Thurgood Marshall Airport on Thursday morning, NBC Washington reports. No injuries were reported among the 111 people onboard the Airbus 300.

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A crash in the state killed two people and involved dozens of vehicles on a major highway Wednesday afternoon, police said, while issuing a reminder to only travel if "absolutely necessary.”

And a western Pennsylvania man was killed when he was struck by a snow plow. According to authorities, John Vichie, 63, of North Versailles, was walking with a snow blower when he was hit just after sunset Wednesday by a public works truck that was backing up.

Virginia State Police responded to approximately 200 crashes and 125 disabled or stuck vehicle, NBC News reports. One of those crashes in Pulaski County killed a 19-year-old North Carolina man, a police spokeswoman said.

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Associated Press writers Tom Hays in New York; Wayne Parry in Point Pleasant, New Jersey; Mike Catalini and Shawn Marsh in Trenton, New Jersey; Skip Foreman in Winston-Salem, North Carolina; Philip Marcelo in Boston, and Dino Hazell in Washington contributed.

The Associated Press/NBC
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