March 11, 2021 – President Joe Biden on Thursday lamented the loss the country has faced over the past year of the coronavirus pandemic, but vowed that with the help of all Americans, normality may return this summer.
Biden, in his first primetime address as president, said every U.S. adult should be eligible for a vaccine beginning May 1 and that it’s possible family and friends may be able to safely gather together in small groups by July 4.
“A year ago we were hit with a virus that was met with silence and spread unchecked,” Biden said on the day he signed into law a $1.9 trillion coronavirus relief bill. “While it was different for everyone, we all lost something. A collective something, a collective sacrifice.”
The toll has been terrible, he said.
“Frontline and essential workers risking their lives and sometimes losing them to rescue others,” Biden said. “Researchers and scientists racing to find a vaccine. And so many of you, as [Ernest] Hemingway wrote, ‘being strong in all the broken places.’”
That should soon change, he said.
“We know what we need to do to beat this virus. Tell the truth, follow the science, work together,” he said.
To that end, Biden reiterated his earlier pledge that the country will enough vaccine doses “for all adults in America by the end of May. That’s months ahead of schedule.”
He said he will use active duty military, FEMA, retired doctors, nurses and administrators and host of other health care professionals, including dentists, to administer vaccines. In addition, the government will create more places to get the shots, including 10,000 drug stores, 600 federal vaccine centers as well as mobile clinics and pop-up clinics and promised to get vaccines to “underserved” communities.
But the president also said he will “direct” states, tribes and U.S. territories to make all adults eligible to be vaccinated no later than May 1.
“That doesn’t man everyone is going to have that shot immediately,” he said, without mentioning that states themselves set priorities for who can get vaccinated and when.