Chart of Centers for Disease Control and Prevention data by The Washington Post |
Post graph from CDC data shows national figures |
Screenshot of state Dept. for Public Health interactive map, labeled by Kentucky Health News |
Kroger Co. is offering customers, employees and other people who get a vaccination the chance to win $1 million or free groceries for a year, the Courier Journal reports: "The sweepstakes are being offered in collaboration with the Biden administration as part of the president’s bid to get the U.S. toward the threshold of herd immunity, where so many Americans are protected against the new coronavirus that it can’t spread."
Alexandra Ellerbeck writes for The Washington Post: "The vaccination rate in the United States has fallen sharply from an average of more than 3 million shots a day in early April to around 1.62 million shots. And although the administration only needs to average about half a million shots a day to reach the July 4 deadline, the number of people who say they want a vaccine but haven’t gotten one is quickly shrinking. Only 4 percent of adults fall in the category of unvaccinated people who say they want a shot 'as soon as possible.' A similar proportion of people have an appointment scheduled for a vaccine or plan to make one in the next three months, even though they say they want to “wait and see” before getting a shot," according to a Kaiser Family Foundation poll. "If both those groups follow through, it may be just enough to reach Biden’s goal."
The Kentucky Chamber of Commerce has gently joined calls for Gov. Andy Beshear to end extra unemployment benefits, as Republican governors have done but he and other Democrats have not. The chamber wrote Beshear Friday, "asking that the administration consider phasing out" the $300 weekly benefit by July instead of the federal program's Sept. 30 ending date, Jacqueline Pitts writes for the chamber's Bottom Line. The business lobby told Beshear that a phase-out would "help address a serious workforce shortage faced by employers." It said that wouldn't be "a cure-all," and "Steps must also be taken to increase access to high-quality child care, retrain and reskill workers, and increase vaccination rates. We also believe that return-to-work incentives, which other states have implemented, are worth exploring, particularly incentives that assist working parents to afford and have access to child care."
Now that the governor is giving pandemic news briefings just once a week, and has resumed a travel schedule that looks to be aimed in part at getting re-elected in 2023, "Politicos are busy jostling over what voters should think of Beshear’s handling of the crisis," writes Lexington Herald-Leader political reporter Daniel Desrochers. "Was he the steady leader who took decisive action to save the lives of thousands of Kentuckians during an unforeseen emergency or the power-hungry executive who overstepped his authority to control the daily lives of Kentuckians?" Kentucky's infection rate was 29th among the states and territories, and its death rate was 32nd, Desrochers reports.
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