US will provide 'arsenal' of vaccines for world; Anheuser-Busch offers to 'buy America's next round': Live COVID-19 updates
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The United States will provide an "arsenal" of vaccines for the world and will donate 75% of its surplus doses through an international initiative for countries in need, the Biden administration announced Thursday.
The administration has pledged to donate at least 80 million doses by month's end. Doses shared through COVAX – a worldwide initiative aimed at equitable access – will prioritize Latin America and the Caribbean, South and Southeast Asia, and Africa, in coordination with the African Union, national security adviser Jake Sullivan said at a briefing Thursday. The other 25% will go for immediate needs and to help tamp down surges around the world.
The plan will prioritize neighbors in our hemisphere but also India, Southeast Asia and countries where the need is especially dire, Sullivan said. Jeff Zients, the White House Coronavirus Response Coordinator, said U.S. vaccine makers are ramping up production so that additional doses can be provided beyond the 80 million already committed.
"The United States will not use its vaccines to secure favors from other countries," Sullivan said. "We will continue to donate from our excess supply as that supply is delivered to us."
Also in the news:
►Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said the city will move up its full reopening date from July 4 to June 11, aligning with the state's plans for lifting pandemic restrictions.
►An unidentified doubles team has been forced out of the French Open because of positive COVID tests, the French Tennis Federation said. FTF said the pair were the first positive tests of 2,446 conducted at the tournament so far.
►West Virginia will give away firearms as a reward for residents who have received a vaccine – part of a Father’s Day lottery that also includes trucks, scholarships and $1 million in prizes. Gov. Jim Justice said the June 20 lottery will be the first and will continue through Aug. 4.
►California has agreed to pay more than $2 million in legal fees in a settlement with churches that challenged pandemic closure orders.
►Colorado will give $50,000 scholarships to 25 students who have received coronavirus vaccinations in another incentive to get as many state residents vaccinated as possible. Gov. Jared Polis said Wednesday that Colorado resident students 12 to 17 who have received at least one vaccine dose are eligible.
📈 Today's numbers: The U.S. has more than 33.3 million confirmed coronavirus cases and 595,900 deaths, according to Johns Hopkins University data. The global totals: Over 171.7 million cases and 3.69 million deaths. More than 136.1million Americans have been fully vaccinated – 41% of the population, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention.
📘 What we're reading: Wisconsin lawmakers are advancing a slate of bills that would bar business owners, university leaders or government officials from requiring the COVID-19 vaccination or treating unvaccinated people differently.
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Brewer to 'buy America's next round of beer'
Brewing giant Anheuser-Busch will "buy America's next round of beer" when the nation reaches President Joe Biden's goal of 70% of adults at least partially vaccinated, the company announced. "At Anheuser-Busch, we are committed to supporting the safe and strong recovery of our nation and being able to be together again at the places and with the people we have missed so much," CEO Michel Doukeris said. "This commitment includes encouraging Americans to get vaccinated, and we are excited to buy Americans 21-plus a round of beer when we reach the White House goal."
Adults 21 and older will be able to upload a picture of themselves "in their favorite place to grab a beer" at MyCooler.com/Beer to sign up to receive one of the company's beers, which include Budweiser and Bud Light among others.
California to consider workplace mask mandate
The California Occupational Safety and Health Standards Board meets today to consider controversial new workplace rules that would only allow workers to go maskless if everyone in a room is fully vaccinated. The proposal is more restrictive than CDC recommendations, and the California Chamber of Commerce is among businesses and organizations crying foul.
“If you are fully vaccinated, (under CDC recommendations) you don’t need to wear a mask inside or outside. That’s the science!" chamber President and CEO Allan Zaremberg said in a statement. “Under these (proposed) rules, workers’ freedoms will be controlled by their fellow workers' decisions to get vaccinated, not by their own choices.”
Fauci: Prognosis 'good,' but vaccination effort must continue
The pandemic prognosis is good, but the U.S. must remain vigilant in its vaccine efforts or a lot of good work could be wasted, warned Dr. Anthony Fauci, director of the National Institute of Allergy and Infectious Diseases. Fauci, speaking Thursday on CNN, said the nation is on a "really good track now to really crush this outbreak." He warned that upticks in cases following Memorial Day celebrations are possible in areas where vaccination rates are relatively low. But he said the vaccination penetration across the country – about 52% of U.S. adults are now fully vaccinated – should tamp down the severity of any surges.
Fauci also warned that cruise ships could once again become virus hot spots if many unvaccinated people are on board.
"If you have a couple of infected people there, you have a risk of spreading as we have seen historically with cruise ships," Fauci warned.
Staffing crisis slams day care industry as pandemic eases
Working parents need child care, but day cares are struggling to retain workers. Just half of the child care workers who left early in the pandemic have returned, Myra Jones-Taylor, the chief policy officer at the nonprofit Zero to Three, said in a recent U.S. Senate committee hearing. The industry’s low pay, rigorous time demands and hit-or-miss benefits make it difficult for its workforce to meet their own child care needs.
“We’re in a staffing crisis in this industry,” said Leslie Spina, the executive director of an early-childhood education provider in Philadelphia. “Workforce development is really in an ugly place right now.” Read more here.
– Alia Wong
First in line, but not all hospital workers want the jab
Hospital workers, many of whom risked their lives during the pandemic and saw the ravages of the virus up close, were first in line for the vaccines. Yet a sizable group of them still are not vaccinated. USA TODAY surveyed some of the largest hospital networks and public hospitals in the country. At the nine networks that responded, fully vaccinated rates ranged from 53% to 72%. Rates among 15 of the nation’s largest public hospitals ranged from 51% to 91%. At Houston’s United Memorial Medical Center, Dr. Joseph Varon is concerned that unvaccinated staff might spread the virus to patients.
“What I don’t understand is how come 40% of my nurses who have worked with me in my COVID unit, where three patients die every day, they still say no,” he said.
– David Heath
Wisconsin lawmakers advance bill to ban requiring proof of vaccination
Wisconsin lawmakers are advancing a slate of bills that would bar business owners, university leaders or government officials from requiring the COVID-19 vaccination or treating unvaccinated people differently. An Assembly committee heard hours of testimony on the five proposals, one of which Democratic Gov. Tony Evers suggested Tuesday he would not sign into law. That bill would forbid any government official or business owner from requiring any person to provide proof of receiving the vaccine as a condition of receiving services, accessing buildings, participating in events or for any business transaction. The Wisconsin Medical Society, which represents doctors, says those rules help ensure patients and workers in hospitals don't get sick.
– Molly Beck, Milwaukee Journal Sentinel
Anti-mask vandals deface school mural honoring essential workers
A colorful, 90-foot mural honoring essential workers at a rural California school district office was vandalized with anti-mask graffiti, causing more than $10,000 in damage. The spray-painted messages read "NO 2 MASKS" and covered the faces of the "larger than life" farmworkers, first responders, teachers and "everyday heroes" that hung from the Kings Canyon Unified School District office's wall. The mural had been up for barely a month when the May 21 incident forced the district to take it down.
"We spent five months working and planning this mural as a very small token of our appreciation to honor the people who make life in our community just a little bit better every day," said Renee Delport, the district's communications officer. "Sadly, a month later we had this vandalism take place ... It's a very sad day for our students and for our community."
– Joshua Yeager, Visalia Times-Delta
Joel Shannon, USA TODAY, and the Associated Press contributed to this column.
This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: US to provide global 'arsenal' of vaccine to the world through COVAX