Nearly one year after the first cases of coronavirus were detected in Maryland, Gov. Larry Hogan addressed the plan to vaccinate residents.

Just a few days short of the one-year mark since the first cases of coronavirus were detected in Maryland, Gov. Larry Hogan addressed the state of the virus at a Tuesday news conference.


A new mass vaccination site is opening Thursday in southern Maryland, he said, with two others opening this month, bringing the total to five statewide.

Three mass vaccination sites are open — at M&T Bank Stadium in Baltimore, the Baltimore Convention Center and Six Flags America in Prince George's County.

A fourth is opening Thursday in Waldorf, according to the governor. One mass vaccination site in Salisbury is opening mid-March, while a Hagerstown site will be operational by the end of March.

"This will give us at least one mass vaccination site in every region of the state, which can administer thousands of shots per day," Hogan said. "In addition, state health and emergency management officials are in active discussions with several other counties that have expressed interest in partnering on additional state mass vaccination sites."

Access to vaccines would drive the addition of any new sites, according to the governor.

"Expanding the hours, the capacity, volume and the number of mass vaccination sites is all contingent on future increases in supply from the federal government," Hogan said. Read more at Patch