How to get the coronavirus vaccine in Georgia ........... “We’ll let them know that unless they either work in Georgia or have a part-time home in Georgia, they’re not allowed to get our Georgia vaccine,” Brown said. Brown says that’s a directive given by the Georgia Department of Health. The vaccine allotment given to the state by the government is based on Georgia’s population, so Georgians must be prioritized first. “We hope people respect that and try not to get around it.” When those eligible for the vaccine call the health department to make an appointment, they are required to prove their residency or work in the state with a driver’s license or work badge ID. “They’re reading the information to us, but when they come in for their appointment, we may ask to see it,” Brown said. If they don’t have any type of identification, the health department will ask a series of questions to determine eligibility. Brown says the county health department has turned away many people from out of state.
Oops... one more. __________________________________ Biden to send surplus AstraZeneca vaccine doses to Mexico, Canada President Biden's administration plans to send millions of doses of the AstraZeneca COVID-19 vaccine to Mexico and Canada, the White House confirmed Thursday, a development that comes as the U.S. faces a surge of migrants at the southern border with Mexico.
Ya know the thing is, a lot of og African Americans already don't trust the govt. Let alone vaccines. And not only that, that disposition has been passed down to their kids too. That's why I posted this. That's bs saying they must verify because they "only have vaccines for Georgians". Anyone can get a vaccine anywhere now. There's no shortage, as evidenced by my second post. See, this is why the govt is clueless. If they really want people on the fence to get a vaccine, let them walk up, get injected, and gtfo. Period. No ID. John Smith, Jane Doe. "Oh but we have to monitor in case there's a reaction". Yeah right. That's bs.
At our board meeting, the discussion on reopening was whether we should require vaccines for all employees in order for them to work here. I listened to the very vocal arguments as to why this was a good idea, and then quietly asked: "So if we require employees to get vaccinations, and someone follows the requirement, but has a severe reaction to the vaccine - or, in a worst case scenario - dies, what does legal think our liability would be?" We won't be requiring vaccinations.
So if your employees are not vaccinated then do you think your customers will want to deal with you or select another vendor. If you don’t require your employees to get vaccinated and one of your employees gets COVID — or in a worst case scenario — is hospitalized and dies, what do you think your legal liability will be? Seeing that the probability of someone dying from COVID is several thousand times more likely than someone dying from the vaccine — I expect your legal liability is much higher from not having employees vaccinated.