A toll-free phone number at which the public may make appointments for a COVID-19 vaccine clinic at Hanover Area Junior-Senior High School this week will go live Monday morning.
The phone number, 1-800-753-8827, will not work prior to Monday morning, according to an email sent Sunday from the office of state Sen. John Yudichak, I-14, Swoyersville.
Wal-Mart will host the vaccine clinic at the high school on Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, Hanover Area Superintendent Nathan Barrett said over the weekend.
Those who wish to register for the clinic are asked to call the toll-free number listed above and not to contact the high school.
Appointments for COVID-19 vaccination clinics at Hanover Area High School this week were booked by last Friday, even before they were publicized, frustrated readers said Monday.
Walmart will host COVID-19 vaccine clinics at Hanover Area High School starting this week, the school district superintendent confirmed on Saturday.
The state Department of Health recently posted a file on its COVID-19 vaccine distribution page listing shipments of the vaccine manufactured by Pfizer for the week of March 1, and the list of shipments included 1,170 doses for Walmart for a clinic at the high school.
Hanover Area Superintendent Nathan Barrett on Saturday said the first three clinics are scheduled for Tuesday, Wednesday and Thursday, with three more set for March 30 through April 1.
Barrett said Walmart representatives told him they wanted a centralized location thatâs handicap-accessible, and they would provide a toll-free number to schedule a vaccination in an effort to assist members of an older population who qualify for a vaccination during Phase 1A of the stateâs rollout but who might not be technologically savvy to do so online via computer.
Cyber attack affecting Hanover Area citizensvoice.com - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from citizensvoice.com Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Every NYC borough has a Main Street and a Broadway.
In Manhattan, Broadway runs north from Bowling Green and, under a variety of names, runs north in NY State almost all the way to the Canadian border. Other than a few other aboriginal roads such as the Bowery and St. Nicholas Ave., it’s one of the few roads that predated the colonial era that’s still in use on Manhattan Island; it was used by the Lenape Indians before the Dutch arrived, and was probably in use by the buffalo before the Native-Americans arrived. It is “broad” in a physical sense only when you get north of Columbus Circle it’s of average width south of that, and called Broadway (Brede-weg) because it was wide in comparison to the narrow cart paths of New Amsterdam that were laid out when the area was first colonized in the 1620s. In the 2000s, traffic engineers have rendered Broadway as no longer a completely uninterrupted road, and it’s a pedestrian plaza for parts of Times Square and Herald Square.