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South Florida counties to DeSantis: Canceling COVID fines sends the wrong message Hannah Morse, Palm Beach Post © LANNIS WATERS/THE PALM BEACH POST Gov. Ron DeSantis announces on Tuesday, Jan. 19, 2021, that vaccinations against COVID-19 are coming to all 67 Publix Super Markets in Palm Beach County. DeSantis made the announcement outside the Publix store at Sea Plum Town Center in Jupiter.
South Florida counties responded to Gov. Ron DeSantis latest executive order that canceled fines for local COVID-19 rule violations, saying the measure sends residents and visitors the wrong message as the pandemic forges on. While our positivity rate continues to trend in the right direction and vaccination efforts are accelerating, now is not the time to throw caution to the wind as we are so close to putting this pandemic behind us, said a joint statement released Monday by Palm Beach, Broward and Miami-Dade counties.
Atul Nakhasi couldn’t stop thinking about Dodger Stadium. The storied ballpark-turned-coronavirus-vaccination-site just 10 minutes from his apartment in downtown Los Angeles had been briefly shut down by anti-vaccine protesters, and Nakhasi, a doctor, was horrified. To him, the nearly hour-long delay amounted to an act of “public harm” and served as a chilling example of how far people who oppose vaccines are willing to go to make their point. He had to do something to respond, but what? The question weighed heavily on Nakhasi’s mind as he drove to a south L.A. hospital to begin his 12th straight day of caring for patients, some severely ill with COVID-19. It was still on his mind as he spoke to the family of a young man in his 20s, whose lungs were so damaged by COVID that he could no longer breathe on his own. A vaccine might have changed this young man’s life, Nakhasi thought, as he told the father that his son would probably need a permanent breathing tube.