Friend --
***Breaking COVID-19 vaccine news: DC seniors 65+ can sign
up for vaccination appointments today and Monday. Today, seniors in
Wards 1, 4, 5, 7, 8 can call 1-855-363-0333 or visit vaccinate.dc.gov.
On Monday, seniors all across the city, including in Wards 2, 3, and
6, can sign up for appointments. More explanation
below!***
On to the inauguration: These next
five days are anxious ones for our city and our country. I live eight
blocks from the U.S. Capitol, very close to Union Station. Early
yesterday morning, I walked from my house around the entire hard
security perimeter set up to protect the Capitol complex. It is large
and wide-ranging, miles of tall black fencing and non-scalable gray
fencing with very visible armed National Guard troops on the other
side. It is a militarized zone.
I am saddened this is the case but I agree with the
decision to proceed with the outdoor Presidential swearing-in ceremony
on the west front of the Capitol, because it is necessary to send the
message that hate will not win. The Trump extremists, including white supremacists, neo-Nazis,
and conspiracy peddlers, who converged in a violent insurrection at
the Capitol January 6 to stage a coup and overturn the democratic and
fair election of Joe Biden and Kamala Harris, cannot be emboldened in
any way, shape or form.
There is a security tradeoff, and
the impact on each of you, on your family members who live here, and
on our city is significant. Daily life will be inconvenienced for at
least the next week, with shutdowns of public transportation, as well
as bridge and road closures. Parts of our beautiful city, including
much of the federal core and the National Mall, will be closed even to
pedestrians. The lead agency making these decisions is the U.S. Secret
Service, with cooperation from federal and local
governments.
Mayor Bowser held a press briefing with some of these agencies yesterday
morning to talk about the security measures, and my colleagues and I
met with local public safety agencies as well. As you have read,
messages on social media indicate extremists will try to converge on
our city again. Our Metropolitan Police Department (MPD) will be
coordinating with many federal law enforcement partners to keep all of
us safe. Below I’ll detail what Chief Robert Contee has said about
MPD’s deployment during this time.
I ask for you to be vigilant and
alert. If you see suspicious activity, there are several ways to
report this information to MPD:
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For immediate threats or emergencies,
call 911
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To report suspicious activity or
behavior, call: (202) 727-9099
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Report by using MPD’s iWATCH website:
iwatchdc.org
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Report by using MPD’s
Text Tip Line at: 50411
There are several ways to stay informed of
inauguration-related activity:
Meanwhile, we are still in the midst of a very deadly
pandemic. As I headlined above, DC Health has opened up
nearly 6,000 first dose vaccine appointments to be filled Saturday and
Monday. However demand for the COVID-19 vaccine far outpaces supply
right now. According to DC Health, we have 86,000 seniors 65+ in the
District. That means vaccination slots are like getting tickets to
Hamilton. Plus, as I’ll detail below, in the first week of
appointments for seniors, data showed a distinct disparity between
wards, which is why DC Health decided to take a different approach
this round. Many residents contacted my office about difficulty
getting appointments, and DC Health has made some adjustments given
the feedback. I’ll go into more detail on this, again,
below.
I wanted to keep this as short and
easy-to-read as possible given we are all stretched thin right now.
Take care and please feel free to get in touch with me if you have
questions, concerns, or need someone to talk to at this challenging
time. We will get through all this together. It is so important to
show compassion and empathy both for others and especially for
yourselves at this time.
Elissa.
Public Safety in
Neighborhoods During This Period
At the mayor’s press briefing and
in a subsequent community conversation yesterday, MPD Chief Contee
stressed that the large federal law enforcement presence in the
inauguration zone allows MPD to focus on District residents and
businesses and safety on our streets.
As I mentioned, I live very close
to the Capitol. One concern I’ve heard my neighbors express, as well
as those who live in Penn Quarter, Foggy Bottom, and Southwest is that
the large security perimeter around the Capitol and Mall might push
extremists onto residential streets. Chief Contee said at the mayor’s
press conference that MPD will be placing more officers and other
resources in these areas.
Another point the Chief stressed:
Please call 911 and report any suspicious activity. Let MPD decide
whether it is worth investigating. Tipsters to MPD helped make arrests
on January 6 for illegal firearms.
The Chief said that MPD will be on full activation, with officers
working 12-hour shifts. He said that this measure will allow the
department to respond to all calls, and that residents should not see
a difference in service during this time.
As far as whether other public safety measures such as a curfew
might be put in place, the Chief said that it is an option but that
decision will be made based on circumstances. No decision has been
made yet. The mayor has extended the public safety emergency to cover
this time so that decisions like this can be made nimbly.
Street and Bridge
Closures
The U.S. Secret Service is the lead
agency on street closures. You can find a list of the closures as of
Friday night here. The District’s Inauguration website will have the latest
information on road closures, and travel apps such as Google Maps
should help show which roads are closed.
Travel to Virginia will be very
limited. Last night, it was announced that the Arlington Memorial
Bridge will be closed through Thursday at 6pm, and the Theodore
Roosevelt and 14th Street Bridge will both be closed in the coming
days. If you have appointments
across the Potomac, please adjust accordingly.
Metrorail and
Metrobus
Metro will close 13 stations inside the security perimeter,
with 11 stations closed now and two additional stations closing today.
These closures will continue through the end of service on Thursday.
Trains will pass through the closed stations without
stopping.
In addition, 26 bus routes will be
detoured around the expanded security perimeter through Thursday.
Metrobus will operate normal service on weekdays and weekends to
accommodate customers making trips outside the zone, with the
exception of January 20, when buses will operate on a Saturday
schedule.
COVID-19
Vaccine
As I mentioned above, DC just
announced more vaccine appointments for our residents. Today beginning
at 9am, residents 65 years of age and older in wards 1, 4, 5, 7, and 8
can call 855-363-0333 or log on to coronavirus.dc.gov/vaccinatedc to make an appointment to get vaccinated.
On Monday at 9am, more appointments will be released for senior
residents in all the wards.
Why did DC Health decide to
reserve vaccine appointments for certain wards? You might
have read press coverage that concerns about racial equity and the
digital divide were raised by some councilmembers in a discussion with
DC Health. I was one of those members. Specifically, I asked our
health director if there was any consideration of reserving some
vaccine appointments for residents in neighborhoods that have the
highest transmission and death rates from COVID-19. My Ward 5
colleague, Kenyan McDuffie, spoke very forcefully about observations
from his ward and other colleagues asked for more information. Last
night, the District released a map of who is getting the appointments.
The difference between the wards is stark: Ward 8, which has seen 20
percent of our COVID deaths, had just 94 residents able to get an
appointment. That’s about 1 percent of the appointments. Ward 3 got
about 40 percent.
I expect this is difficult news to
read. Everyone who wants a vaccine should get one as quickly as
possible. I agree, and I am optimistic that distribution will improve
with the Biden administration. Yet we need to be aware that a “first
come, first served” approach does not take into consideration
inequities in our community. I do feel strongly that we need to make
sure that our residents most at risk from contracting and dying from
COVID-19 have access to the vaccine. I also expressed concerns, which
didn’t get as much press coverage, that we need to do more with our
residents whose first language is not English; many of these neighbors
work in essential jobs and risk exposure to COVID every day just going
to work.
Sometimes I get ribbed for being a data-driven councilmember; of
course, data shouldn’t be the only factor in policy making, but I do
believe we need data to inform us and help us make course corrections
so that our policies are fair and equitable. There is reluctance of
some neighbors, particularly in the Black community, to trust the
vaccine. And it is also true that Ward 3 has a large number of
seniors. That’s why we need to look at our policies and not be afraid
to question whether they are fair to everyone and accomplish the main
goal: to keep our residents safe and healthy.
If you are over the age of 64 and
want to schedule an appointment, please call the
District’s call center at 855-363-0333, Monday through Friday from 8 am to 7pm and
Saturday from 8 am to 4 pm, or go to https://coronavirus.dc.gov/vaccinatedc.
If you know of anyone age 65 or
older in the District, especially in wards 1, 4, 5, 7, and 8,
please call them today and see if they need help
signing up for a vaccine.
Friends don’t let friends go unvaccinated.
If you do not work in a health care
setting or not a District resident 65 years of age and older,
submit your email address or mobile
phone and you will receive
an email or text message when the registry opens to additional
populations.
Councilmember Elissa Silverman http://www.elissasilverman.com/
Thank you for reading! Have questions or need to get in
touch? Reach us at [email protected] or
202-724-7772.
Councilmember Elissa Silverman
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