January 29, 2021
FREE
DOUGLAS COUNTY, COLORADO
A publication of
ParkerChronicle.net
INSIDE: VOICES: PAGE 10 | LIFE: PAGE 14 | CALENDAR: PAGE 17
VOLUME 19 | ISSUE 11
Officials exploring Tri-County alternatives Commissioners hope to have new way of offering public health services by 2023 BY ELLIOTT WENZLER EWENZLER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Respiratory therapist Robin Mannino receives the COVID-19 vaccine in mid-December at Parker Adventist Hospital.
FILE PHOTOS
Vaccine rollout facing challenges Phone support being escalated in push to get COVID-19 shots out to residents 70 and older BY ELLIOTT WENZLER EWENZLER@COLORADOCOMMUNITYMEDIA.COM
Colorado residents ages 70 and older are now eligible to receive the COVID-19 vaccine, but public health officials are struggling to scale that operation up as quickly as possible.
Douglas County hospitals and clinics are finding several struggles in the vaccine rollout, including limited supply and communication barriers. “Online has been easiest to set up (appointments) but that’s inadequate for this population,” said Kaitlin Wolff with Tri-County Public Health Department. That’s why Tri-County is in the process of increasing their phone support operations and scaling up their call center staff, said Wolff, who is also a public health nurse in charge of coordinating the health SEE VACCINE, P7
DOWN THE DIAL?
COVID-19 rules mean certified businesses still waiting to increase capacity P3
Sky Ridge Pharmacy Director Valerie Davis, left, and pharmacy technician Karen Fetter prepare the COVID-19 vaccine for inoculation in mid-December.
Douglas County is moving forward on finding a new way to deliver public health services to its residents by 2023 but has not determined a specific path forward or how much it will cost. In a Jan. 25 news release that was approved by county commissioners, a spokesperson said this desire for change was brought about by the COVID-19 pandemic. “The COVID-19 pandemic revealed to the board of Douglas County commissioners that the time to evaluate and seek a different solution to public health services of a county this size has come,” the news release states. “Commissioners are quick to note that what the service delivery model will look like and cost is in the beginning phase of being discovered.” After Tri-County Health Department put a mask mandate in place in July 2020, the board of Douglas County commissioners voted to leave the health department the following year. Commissioners later rescinded that notice and said SEE TRI-COUNTY, P7
SOUNDS OF THE STREETS
Outdoor performers offer an eclectic array of entertainment P14