BY ROBERT POZARYCKI 
 The  Fire  Department’s  
 team  of  EMTs  and  paramedics  
 save lives every day by answering  
 the emergency call of  
 duty — but on March 30, they  
 continued  an  effort  to  protect  
 the most vulnerable New  
 Yorkers before receiving a 911  
 call for help. 
 The  fi rst  responders  were  
 dispatched to visit the residences  
 of homebound seniors  
 and deliver the COVID-19 vaccine  
 directly  to  them, as part  
 of an ongoing program created  
 in collaboration with the  
 Fire Department’s Incident  
 Management team and the Department  
 for the Aging. 
 Both Mayor  Bill  de  Blasio  
 and Fire Commissioner Dan  
 Nigro saluted some of these  
 life-savers on Tuesday morning  
 during a send-off ceremony  
 in Canarsie, just before  
  
 16     COURIER LIFE, APRIL 2-8, 2021 
 they headed out to deliver upwards  
 of 300 vaccines to the  
 homebound that day. 
 So far, the Vaccine For  
 All team has already delivered  
 shots  to more  than 3,200  
 homebound New Yorkers. The  
 team has also reached out to  
 14,000 seniors eligible for the  
 program, scheduling appointments  
 in the weeks ahead for  
 seniors to receive the life-saving  
 shot. 
 “This  is  absolutely  beautiful, 
   what  you’re  doing  for  
 people literally in the greatest  
 need in this whole city,” de  
 Blasio  told  team members  on  
 March 30. “They can’t get to  
 the vaccination. And unless  
 you were  there,  they’re  going  
 to be alone. They’re going to  
 be isolated. They’re going to  
 be  fearful. Their  families  are  
 going to be fearful for them.  
 But then you show up, and you  
 literally saved the day.” 
 De  Blasio  described  the  
 fi rst  responders  as  being  heroic  
 because of their ability to  
 change someone’s life for the  
 better.  
 “You change a life, you save  
 a life,” the mayor told them.  
 “You make a whole family feel  
 peace. So, if not for you, a lot of  
 folks would feel hopeless right  
 now. But we’re so glad that our  
 friends in the media are here  
 because the whole city is going  
 to see that just because someone’s  
 homebound does not  
 mean they’re forgotten, does  
 not mean that they’re  left out  
 because  you’re  coming  to  the  
 rescue.” 
 Nigro said the efforts of the  
 vaccine  team  come  with  the  
 territory of being one of New  
 York’s Bravest. 
 “Our fi refi ghters,  EMTs,  
 paramedics, every day save  
 EMS units ready to deliver the COVID-19 vaccine to homebound seniors. 
   Photo by Lloyd Mitchell 
 lives. We’re happy to be part  
 of this program,” he said. “I’m  
 happy that I have the talented  
 people around you from our  
 Incident Management Team  
 that can put something like  
 this  together  and  manage  it  
 day-in and day-out for our  
 great city… It’s because of  
 their  management  skills  that  
 we can get this done, and your  
 skills and your dedication.” 
 The  move  to  vaccinate  
 homebound seniors was fi rst  
 announced in mid-February,  
 weeks  after  southern  Brooklyn  
 Councilmember  Mark  
 Treyger and state Sen. Diane  
 Savino  fi rst  urged  the  city  
 to devise a plan to vaccinate  
 homebound seniors, arguing  
 that  the  vulnerable  elders  
 were  getting  left  behind  in  
 the city’s vaccination effort. 
 If you or someone you love is  
 a homebound senior and want  
 to  schedule  an  appointment  to  
 receive the vaccine, visit vax- 
 4nyc.nyc.gov or call 877-VAX- 
 4NYC.  
 Additional reporting by  
 Rose Adams 
 ‘You change a life,  
 you save a life’ 
 EMTs in BK help vaccinate homebound seniors 
  
  
  
  
  
  
   
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
  
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
    
  
  
  
    
    
  
    
  
  
  
    
  
  
  
  
   
    
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
  
 
				
/4nyc.nyc.gov