Governor Jay Inslee announced today that the state is expanding its Phase 1B1 COVID-19 vaccine eligibility to include any Washingtonian age 65 or older as well as those age 50 and older who are living in multi-generational households.
This move will expand vaccine eligibility, starting today, to 1.5 million Washingtonians, including high-risk health care workers, first responders and residents and staff at long-term care facilities included in the state’s first phase of COVID-19 vaccinations.
The governor noted that 80 percent of all COVID-19 deaths in Washington have been among those age 65 and older, and said many of the communities disproportionately impacted by the coronavirus also live in multigenerational households, so the move should “make it possible for more people in higher-risk categories to get vaccines.”
Although there are now 1.5 million Washingtonians eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine, state leaders cautioned that the state’s supply of vaccine is still limited, with only about 100,000 doses coming into Washington each week.
To help get “doses into arms,” Inslee said the state is opening mass vaccination sites the week of Jan. 25, including a mass vaccination site at the Clark County Fairgrounds in Ridgefield; launching a stateside, online “Phase Finder” function that will help people find out if they are eligible to receive the vaccine and where they might find doses available in their area; requiring health partners administering the vaccines to give 95 percent of their vaccine allocations within a week of receiving the doses; and partnering with private companies, including Kaiser Permanente, Microsoft and Starbucks, to “accelerate COVID vaccinations … in the most efficient way possible.”