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|    Message 90,454 of 90,757    |
|    brewnoser to All    |
|    'Quiet work' to give natives in cities p    |
|    01 Feb 21 17:06:39    |
      From: brewnoser2@gmail.com              Think about it. . . . indigenous communities in the Yukon, NWT and Nunavut       were given priority vaccinations against Covid-19 'because of the remote areas       where medical facilities are scarce'. Most of these were to communities that       hadn't recorded a        single case of Covid-19.              Okay, now we have word that 'quiet work' is being done to give natives who       live in urban areas - like the majority of us in Canada - priority for the       vaccines. Let's be clear here: RACE will be the determining factor for       priority access to the vaccine.        Not for any other 'race' - just the indigenous one.              Anyone else waiting desperately for the vaccine because of personal medical       conditions, age, job with high public exposure . . . do you have a problem       with that?       ____________________________________________       The Canadian Press - Wednesday, January 20, 2021              Ottawa advocating to prioritize vaccines for Indigenous people              OTTAWA -- Indigenous Services Minister Marc Miller says the federal government       is working with the provinces to prioritize vaccinating Indigenous people       against COVID-19, including those who live in urban centres and other places       where the provinces        provide health services.              "This is a particularly acute issue and challenge when we're talking about the       deployment of the vaccine," Miller told a news conference Wednesday in Ottawa.              Miller said he has been concerned that Ottawa is not able to vaccinate First       Nations people living off-reserve, as well as Metis and Inuit outside federal       jurisdiction. He said the federal government is doing "quiet work" with the       provinces to prioritize        these groups.              "We need participation of the provinces to ensure that needles get into        the arms of people that are the most vulnerable," he said.       ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^              "The role of the federal government, in my mind, is to offer our assets, offer       our co-operation our resources, our logistical capacities."              The National Advisory Committee on Immunization recommends the first phase of       the COVID-19 vaccine rollout prioritize people who live and work in long-term       care homes, people over the age of 80, front-line health workers, and adults       in Indigenous        communities where an outbreak can be particularly harmful and hard to manage.              Dr. Tom Wong, chief medical officer of public health at Indigenous Services       Canada, said the department is now working with Indigenous partners and       provinces and territories to specifically prioritize elders for receiving the       COVID-19 vaccine, and other        groups.              "We are working with partners, including urban partners, urba               Indigenous partners, local health departments, provinces and territories to       really emphasize, and advocate for the inclusion in the rollout early       on vaccines for underserved First Nations, Metis and Inuit," he said.               "We're very glad that in some jurisdictions, they are already making plans in       the coming days and weeks to actually specifically support First Nations,       Metis and Inuit in those downtown, inner-city, hard-to-reach       ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^       areas to actually offer the vaccine."       ^^^^^              In a news release Wednesday, Indigenous Services Canada said there have been       89 COVID-19 cases, including 15 deaths, in nine long-term       ^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^^       care homes on reserves located in Manitoba, Alberta, Ontario and Quebec.              The number of COVID-19 active cases in First Nations communities reached an       all-time high this week with 5,571 reported cases as of Tuesday.              The department said COVID-19 vaccine rollouts have already started in 169       Indigenous communities in all provinces and territories except Nova Scotia and       P.E.I.       _____________________________              Just heard on a CBC program today that because the native people KNOW that if       those of them who live in cities and urban areas - that have full access to       medical faciities - start to get priority for the vaccine, they may face       accusations of racist        policy being applied.              The plan? They would get their vaccine at 'indigenous oriented' facilities       with security provided. Anyone have a problem with that?              --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05        * Origin: you cannot sedate... all the things you hate (1:229/2)    |
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