The new sites are part of an effort to establish 100 vaccination supersites nationwide in the Biden administration's first 100 days. They will be co-run by FEMA and Cal Office of Emergency Services.
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FEMA will provide resources and staffing to establish the vaccination centers. The plan is to start with 5,000 to 6,000 doses per day.
Gov. Gavin Newsom announced the partnership on Wednesday at the Oakland-Alameda Coliseum, which will be another vaccination site.
Both sites will begin administering COVID-19 vaccinations on Feb. 16.
The governor said the locations were chosen to help to ensure communities that are typically left behind, such as minorities and the poor, receive vaccines.
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"The whole idea is to speed up the throughput, the sufficiency, maintain an equitable lens in terms of the application and distribution of the vaccines," Newsom said.
The governor said the state would be receiving an additional 1,060,000 doses of the vaccine this week but recognized that low supply was affecting areas across the state. However, officials say the doses administered at CSULA will not reduce L.A. County's vaccine allotment due to the partnership with FEMA.
Several vaccination sites across the state have had to pause administering the first doses of the vaccine due to short supply. California is currently administering about 1 million doses per week, but that pace is still in the bottom half of all states per capita.
Access to vaccines is increasing across the Southland. L.A. County has nearly 300 vaccination sites, including five mass vaccinations sites.
Here are the CVS locations in SoCal that will offer COVID-19 vaccines starting next week
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