CANADIAN PRESS
Thousands of Ontarians are getting their COVID-19 vaccines not at pharmacies or doctorsโ offices, but at a clinic pulled together by a construction company through a public-private partnership.
The clinic run by Mississauga-based EllisDon has seen more than 15,000 people book appointments, scheduled between May 19 and 26.
โWeโre completely full. And we just have families, kids, community all getting shots, and the emotions here are so high,โ said Steve Chaplin, vice-president of health, safety and environment.
โItโs so powerful. Itโs just such a great feeling for us as a company to be able to sponsor that.โ
EllisDon is one of several companies running their own vaccine clinics. Others include Amazon, Maple Leaf Foods and Maple Lodge Farms, though those companies are not currently offering shots to community members.
Instead, some companies have said theyโll โsponsorโ pop-up clinics at some point down the line.
Organizing such a clinic is something of a pivot for EllisDon, ย but making quick changes has become the norm for many businesses over the past 14 months.
From securing personal protective equipment to offering rapid tests and now vaccines, the company has had to adapt to stay operational during the COVID-19 pandemic, said Chaplin, whoโs taken the lead on organizing the vaccine drive.
Initially, the company had planned to offer shots to employees and their families, he said.
โOur original thinking was, thereโs not enough resources to get vaccines in arms, and we knew the supply was coming, so we started pursuing industry-led clinics with the province,โ Chaplin said.
But with that model, theyโd only filled 1,700 appointments out of a possible 15,000.
โWhat we thought weโd do is a heartfelt response to the community, to say, โAll we want to do is get shots in arms and help people. So if youโre 12 and up and you can get here, letโs make a difference,’โ he said.
But getting to that point was no easy feat.
He said he had just over a week from the time the company was given the green light to operate the clinic to opening day.
โWe were fortunate that we had two nursing companies that we were using to do the rapid testing,โ Chaplin said. โBut the key here is, we donโt have any medical staff with EllisDon. Weโre a construction company, we build things. And so we just know how to get things done.โ
EllisDon partnered with a couple other companies โ Flynn, Modern Niagara and Central Ontario Building Trades โ to pay for the whole thing, save for the vaccines, which were provided by the Region of Peel.
In addition to the nurses, they had to recruit an outside company that could handle the private health-care information involved in booking vaccine appointments and checking people in, he said.
Such a ย model further fragments Ontarioโs bumpy vaccine rollout.
Those who booked a vaccine at EllisDonโs clinic couldnโt do so through the provincial booking system or phone line, or through a regional website. Instead, they had to go to a different website, which they could learn about from media reports, social media accounts dedicated to sharing vaccine information or word of mouth.
As of Sunday, Ontario had administered 8,065,607 doses of COVID-19 vaccine. More than 530,000 residents had been fully vaccinated.