THE BULLETIN • WEDNESDAY, MARCH 3, 2021 A13 Vaccine ing used. Its statistical drawbacks have drawn the most attention. The Johnson & Johnson vaccine has shown an efficacy of about 80% in tests. The Moderna and Pfizer vaccines have an efficacy of more than 95%. CDC officials have said that even if there is a slightly higher chance of getting infected with COVID-19 with the Johnson & Johnson vaccine, it is strong enough to prevent severe ill- ness and death. On the positive side, the Johnson & Johnson vaccine re- quires only one shot. That makes it a boon for inoculating parts of the pop- ulation that are difficult to reach for second doses or those who might not return for the booster of Moderna or Pfizer. Because it only needs stan- dard commercial-level refrig- eration, it can be transported to areas farther away in rural or mountainous areas. The Pfizer and Moderna doses have to be kept in ultra-cold freezers, then thawed before being administered. The White House on Tues- day told states to plan on ad- ministering 16 million to 17 million total weekly doses of Pfizer and Moderna vaccines by the end of March, climb- ing to 17 million to 18 million weekly by early April. More is on the way. States receiving 14.5 million doses of the Pfizer and Moderna vac- cine will receive 15.2 million doses next week. Johnson & Johnson says it can ship 2.8 million doses to states this week of vaccine pro- duced as it anticipated federal approval. But it won’t be able to sustain that number immedi- ately. The company produced 3.9 million doses total prior to federal approval on Saturday. The company says it will meet its commitment to de- liver 100 million doses by June 30. The deal with Merck could double production within two months. The Biden administration estimates that after a short dip in doses, the increased produc- tion aided by Merck will rise to 4 million to 6 million doses per week by March 31 and 5 million to 6 million doses per week by April 30. When the first two vaccines were approved in December, U.S. officials were optimistic that some of the more than 20 Currently, the only weapon that Democratic leaders have is minor financial fines and withholding per diems for ex- penses. A resolution to change the constitution to make a ma- jority the minimum for a quo- rum has been introduced this session. Even if it won legisla- tive approval, the change in the constitution would have to be referred to votes. The earliest the change could go into effect would be 2022. With battles over the bud- get, taxes, guns, environmental issues, vaccines, housing aid and police reform expected to come up for votes, Kotek said there is concern that Republi- cans will depart again to derail majority rule. No lawmaker will be up for election again until 2022, leaving the status quo likely in place for the ses- sion this year and next. as the Legislature. No VIP pass Oregon lawmakers are get- ting or asking for special access to vaccinations for COVID-19. The Legislature is part of the “essential worker” group that will be eligible May 1. Some lawmakers can get vaccinated earlier as qualifying under cur- rently eligible groups such as health care workers or those age 65 and older. Colorado is the only state that has inoc- ulated legislators as part of a “continuity of government” effort. In Oregon, Brown has also yet to receive vaccine. Though Brown would likely qualify for an exemption un- der U.S. Center for Disease Control and Prevention rules, she would qualify under the same essential worker category Blankenship testifies on redistricting headaches Local officials will have to scramble to deal with the fall- out of the long delay in reap- portionment of political dis- tricts, Deschutes County Clerk Nancy Blankenship testified last week before the House Re- districting Committee. Blankenship appeared in her role as co-chair of the legisla- tive committee of the Oregon Association of County Clerks. The 2020 Census data to redis- trict legislative and congressio- nal maps for the 2022 election won’t arrive until September, six months past the federal deadline. The COVID-19 pan- demic made gathering popu- lation data difficult. The delay means the Oregon Supreme Continued from A1 Oregon will receive 34,000 doses of the Johnson & John- son vaccine. Every county will initially receive 100 doses to familiarize health officials with the vaccine, the first new vac- cine since December. “Because doses will be lim- ited for the first few weeks, the state has committed some al- locations to addressing access issues for some Oregonians who’ve experienced barriers to getting vaccinated,” said Jona- than M. Modie, lead commu- nications officer for the Ore- gon Health Authority’s public health division. About 4,800 doses will go to local public health authorities to vaccinate Oregonians liv- ing in adult foster homes and other in-home senior popula- tions. Walmart and Bi-Mart, two new partners in the state’s pharmacy vaccinations pro- gram, will also receive the Johnson & Johnson vaccines. Additional doses will go to some unspecified health sys- tems in the state. The new vaccine has pros and cons compared to the two- shot vaccine from Moderna and Pfizer that is currently be- Politics Continued from A1 That’s 20 out of 30 senators. Democrats hold 18 seats. “We cannot normalize the behavior of people walking off the job,” House Speaker Tina Kotek, D-Portland, said during a press call on Monday. “It was bad in 2019 when this hap- pened. It was bad in 2020. It’s deplorable that it’s happening now, again, in the middle of a crisis.” Republicans made the surprise move without tell- ing Senate Democrats or the House Republican caucus. In a letter to Gov. Kate Brown, the 11 Republicans said they were absent to protest her extension of an emergency order that al- lows her to decide if businesses and schools are open or closed. Ryan Brennecke/Bulletin file Karla Toms, a registered nurse with St. Charles Health System, adminis- ters a vaccine in the arm of Suzi Smith, of Bend, during a COVID-19 vac- cination clinic at the Deschutes County Fair & Expo Center in Redmond in January. additional vaccines in various stages of development would soon flood the country with enough doses to quickly inoc- ulate all Americans. But vaccines developed by Merck, GlaxoSmithKline and Sanofi failed, and research was discontinued. A vaccine by AstraZeneca did not meet federal standards for test reliability. It is in use in Britain and other parts of the world. Vaccines by Russia and China are considered unreli- able by U.S. standards. Vaccination rates have picked up in recent weeks. The CDC said just under 51 million Americans have re- ceived at least one shot of the Moderna or Pfizer vaccine. Of those, about 25.5 million have received both shots to become fully vaccinated. That still accounts for just over 15% of the adult popula- tion vaccinated since the first vaccines were introduced at the end of last year. Oregon is nearing 1 million total shots. Mass vaccination centers have been joined re- cently by a pharmacy program that allows residents to be in- oculated closer to home. In Oregon and other states, demand for vaccine has far outstripped supply. With ad- ditional groups being made eligible, the competition for appointments to get inoculated has been intense. Vaccination appointments filled rapidly, and breakdowns in websites and communi- cation have plagued getting doses into people’s arms. Recent severe winter weather across the United States, including ice storms in Portland and Salem, hampered distribution and forced cancel- lation of thousands of appoint- ments. CDC officials have said that when 70% to 80% of the popu- lation is vaccinated, the coun- try will reach “herd immunity” that will protect even the un- vaccinated because the virus will not find enough hosts to infect. A key step remaining is to develop a vaccine for children. The current vaccines are only authorized for those 16 and over. Biden has said that any ex- cess doses of vaccine could be sent to aid foreign coun- tries to help the long-term suppression of COVID-19 around the globe. There have been 114.7 million infections and 2.54 million deaths from COVID-19 worldwide. Court will decide whether the Legislature, secretary of state or courts will draw the new maps. The process is always polit- ically charged, especially this year with Oregon expected to get a sixth congressional dis- trict, the first change in delega- tion size in 40 years. Blankenship submitted a let- ter with detailed requests from the clerks’ group. It asked law- makers to consider the impact of their decisions on a long list of related but often overlooked impacts on items such as com- munity college, library, and other local panels. The best route to less tur- moil is simplicity and trans- parency, Blankenship testified. “We would urge avoiding, whenever possible, dividing cities by federal and state leg- islative district lines, espe- cially smaller cities,” she said. “In the event that cities must be divided, consideration of city council districts, city ur- ban growth boundary, county boundary, school districts and other affected communities of interest should be taken into consideration before confusing divisions are adopted.” Before any final decision was made, she asked that county officials get a chance to look at the maps and raise pos- sible conflicts before the deci- sions are finalized. “Allow county elections offi- cials time to provide feedback and clarification to the Legis- lature on proposed changes as we may be able to provide an- swers that help avoid mistakes from being made,” she said. e e e e gwarner@eomediagroup.com gwarner@eomediagroup.com SAVINGSEVENT V I SEV EVENT E EV VEN Mattresses Recliners Sofas Sectionals Bedroom Sets Lift Chairs Chofa Just From $549 $699 Dining Sets Accessories Swivel Glider Recliner Just $549 FREE Base or FREE Pillows with Purchase FREE DELIVERY & SPECIAL FINANCING AVAILABLE* *Subject to credit approval. 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