A 94-year-old Punta Gorda man died on Monday following a 4-vehicle crash in early December.

The crash occurred at the intersection of US-41 and Hancock Avenue on Dec. 1, according to a Florida Highway Patrol news release.

According to the report, the man suffered a medical episode while crossing the intersection. His vehicle, a sedan, drifted across the lanes and hit three others.

The four drivers in the crash were not named due to Marsy’s Law.

A 74-year-old man and his 71-year-old passenger, both of Punta Gorda, suffered minor injuries in the crash.

A 48-year-old man, of Port Charlotte, also suffered minor injuries in the crash.

 

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Every county in Southwest Florida now has the COVID-19 vaccine for the general public, and on Wednesday, the final county to get it laid out its plan, filling up all appointment slots in minutes.

Gov. Ron DeSantis reminded people Wednesday that there are limited vaccines available – not enough for everyone, for now — and that people should be patient.

Collier County was the last Southwest Florida county to get vaccines for public distribution, and it only took minutes for the health department to be all booked up at its three sites.

People weren’t happy that appointments went so fast, but by making appointments, the county could avoid the long lines that plagued its neighbor to the north.

“They got people sleeping in their cars … that’s not good, right?” said Larry Gardner, a Collier County resident.

Vaccinations in Collier will begin Sunday, Jan. 3, and will only be given to high-risk frontline health care workers and people 65 years of age and older. Three hundred people were signed up to get them.

Richard Bialeck doesn’t mind waiting until appointments open up again, which will happen once the county receives more doses.

“I’m retired. Every day is Saturday!” Bialeck said with a laugh. After he gets his two doses, he plans to reunite with family he hasn’t seen in months in Connecticut and North Carolina.

Some also complained the health department was hard to get a hold of. Spokesperson Kristine Hollingsworth said they were busy with calls all day long and received nearly 700 emails. She asks everyone for patience.

“We understand that Collier County is a very diverse area and a very diverse community. We also understand that we have many different ages here, and we want to be able to provide everyone the opportunity to get the vaccine,” she said.

The county will continue to receive the vaccine in the following weeks and will announce further dates.

“We have received 3,500 doses in this initial supply. However, we will be continuously receiving vaccines throughout the vaccine rollout. So this is not the only supply that we have – we will continue to receive vaccines,” Hollingsworth said.

Also, note that COVID-19 testing has been canceled for all sites with the exception of Thursday, Jan. 7, at North Collier Regional Park Soccer Fields from 9 a.m. to 3 p.m.

Future appointments for the COVID-19 vaccine will be made via Eventbrite. WINK News will provide updates online and on our app as information is received.

Note: Each event listed below is no longer accepting appointments.

Jan. 3, 2021, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Florida Department of Health in Collier County,
3339 E. Tamiami Trail, Naples, 34112

  • Drive-Thru.
  • Appointment made on Eventbrite.
  • Healthcare personnel with direct patient contact and persons 65+.
    • Healthcare personnel with direct patient contact will be asked to provide
      identification indicating they are healthcare staff.
  • Face masks must be worn while waiting in vehicles.
  • No referral needed. No cost. Clients will be asked to complete a registration form
    prior to receiving the vaccine.
  • Lightning, heavy rain, or gusty winds can slow operations or shut down the site.

Jan. 4, 2021, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.: North Collier Regional Park Soccer Fields:
15000 Livingston Road, Naples, 34109

  • Drive-Thru.
  • Appointment made on Eventbrite.
  • Healthcare personnel with direct patient contact and persons 65+.
    • Healthcare personnel with direct patient contact will be asked to provide
      identification indicating they are healthcare staff.
  • Face masks must be worn while waiting in vehicles.
  • No referral needed. No cost. Clients will be asked to complete a registration form
    prior to receiving the vaccine.
  • Lightning, heavy rain, or gusty winds can slow operations or shut down the site.

Jan. 5, 2021, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.: Winn Dixie Mall, 1500 Lake Trafford Road,
Immokalee, 34142

  • Walk-Up.
  • Appointment made on Eventbrite.
  • Healthcare personnel with direct patient contact and persons 65+.
    • Healthcare personnel with direct patient contact will be asked to provide
      identification indicating they are healthcare staff.
  • Face masks must be worn while waiting.
  • No referral needed. No cost. Clients will be asked to complete a registration form
    prior to receiving the vaccine.
  • Lightning, heavy rain, or gusty winds can slow operations or shut down the site.

Jan. 6, 2021, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m.: North Collier Regional Park Soccer Fields: 15000
Livingston Road, Naples, 34109

  • Drive-Thru.
  • Appointment made on Eventbrite.
  • Healthcare personnel with direct patient contact and persons 65+.
    • Healthcare personnel with direct patient contact will be asked to provide
      identification indicating they are healthcare staff.
  • Face masks must be worn while waiting in vehicles.
  • No referral needed. No cost. Clients will be asked to complete a registration form
    prior to receiving the vaccine.
  • Lightning, heavy rain, or gusty winds can slow operations or shut down the site.

Jan. 7, 2021, HEALTHCARE PERSONNEL WITH DIRECT PATIENT CONTACT
ONLY: Florida Department of Health in Collier County, 3339 E. Tamiami Trail,
Naples, 34112

  • Healthcare personnel with direct patient contact by appointment only. Call (239) 252-6220.
    • Healthcare personnel with direct patient contact will be asked to provide
      identification indicating they are healthcare staff.
  • Face masks must be worn while waiting.
  • No referral needed. No cost. Clients will be asked to complete a registration form
    prior to receiving the vaccine.
  • Lightning, heavy rain, or gusty winds can slow operations or shut down the site.

Jan. 8, 2021, 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. North Collier Regional Park Soccer Fields:
15000 Livingston Road, Naples, 34109

  • Drive-Thru.
  • Appointment made on Eventbrite.
  • Healthcare personnel with direct patient contact and persons 65+.
    3

    • Healthcare personnel with direct patient contact will be asked to provide
      identification indicating they are healthcare staff.
  • Face masks must be worn while waiting.
  • No referral needed. No cost. Clients will be asked to complete a registration form
    prior to receiving the vaccine.
  • Lightning, heavy rain, or gusty winds can slow operations or shut down the site

The DOH-Collier call center will remain open Monday to Sunday from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m.
The call center can be reached at (239) 252-6220. For more information regarding COVID-19, visit the DOH pandemic website.

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Gov. Ron DeSantis held a press conference Wednesday morning in Delray Beach concerning the state’s vaccination rollout.

Watch a replay below or by clicking here.

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This week’s rollout of the COVID-19 vaccine in Lee County has seen long lines and many sitting out in the cold overnight just to try to get a dose. Charlotte County offered vaccines with a different approach.

Outside Charlotte’s vaccination sites Wednesday morning was a sight starkly different from Tuesday in Lee: no lines, as the county required appointments, and the vaccines were given as a drive-thru service.

That doesn’t mean the process was entirely seamless, though. After appointments were announced, hundreds of people logged on to get their spot, and the traffic crashed the website. One woman in Port Charlotte says she doesn’t know if appointments are the best way to do this.

“What about all these really elderly people in their 70s, 80s and 90s that don’t have a computer or can’t see well enough to see a computer or can’t sit at a computer?” said Paula de Rienzo.

For one couple, it was their second attempt at getting the vaccine, and they said Lee County could learn a few things from the way Charlotte County handled their event.

“This was a piece of cake; whoever thought of this did a good job,” said Vito Verni of Estero.

He and his wife, Janet, were one of the lucky ones. They got an appointment, drove through the line and got their first shot – no need to even get out of their car. That was in stark contrast to their experience in Bonita Springs on Tuesday.

“I felt sorry for them, the older people … we got there at 3:30 in the afternoon, they were there already, the first lady online and a chair with the lantern and a blanket, this is the day before,” Janet said.

Joseph Pepe, director of the Florida Department of Health in Charlotte County, says Wednesday is being used as a trial run, after which changes can be made. But the appointments will not change; they don’t want anyone waiting outside in a line for hours.

“We knew that we’re the second-oldest county in the state as far as by age, we just didn’t want our most vulnerable people camping out all night to get a vaccine,” de Rienzo said. “It’s just the safer way to do it by appointment.”

More than 200 vaccines were administered in about two and a half hours Wednesday.

Punta Gorda residents Debra Rakowitz and her husband were among those receiving a dose, and Rakowitz said it was “quick and painless.”

The DOH-Charlotte said the only change for the next round is to get more vaccines and more staff.

“We all got kind of thrown into this really quickly; we had about 24 hours to come up with a plan,” said Edwardo Gonzalez, vaccine coordinator with the health department. “The process was created previously and we kind of tweaked it a little bit just to see how it went because we didn’t want to have a massive amount of individuals waiting too long and then clogging the roads.”

The county says all appointment slots are filled for next week, but more vaccine dates will be announced Jan. 6. WINK News will post that information online once it’s released.

The shot is free, and you don’t need to be a Charlotte County resident to get vaccinated. Health care workers will need to bring a copy of their ID badge or their current pay stub.

For those that got a dose Wednesday and will need a second dose, you’ll have to go back to the website you first registered on to make an appointment for the second dose. The appointments will be available once the health department gets more doses.

They are working on a way to label those coming back to make a second appointment on the website. The DOH doesn’t see that happening next week.

https://winknews.com/2020/12/29/covid-19-vaccine-schedules-for-swfl/

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On the third day of COVID-19 vaccinations, the energy continues to grow along with the the lines.

Lots of people are eager to get this vaccine. On Tuesday, Bill Taylor of Cape Coral said he planned to stay in the Cape Coral Cultural Park Theater line all night, and that he was willing to do whatever it takes to get the vaccine.

“I thought, instead of being anxious week after week after week, which is almost as bad as being anxious about the pandemic, I decided I’m going to bite the bullet and be out here all night if I have to and get the vaccine,” Taylor said.

There are three sites open Wednesday in Lee County. The theater location in Cape Coral starts giving shots at 9 a.m. You don’t need an appointment, but you must bring your I.D. This is intended for Lee County residents 65 and older and high-risk frontline health care workers, but people outside those categories won’t necessarily be refused a shot.

One father and daughter – ages 93 and 71, respectively – had friends holding their place in line because the father is unable to stand for too long. They arrived at the site at around 6 a.m., bringing blankets to stay warm.

Mayor Joe Coviello said the site will give more than 800 people the shot on Wednesday.

“The city’s role right now is to provide a facility like we have today that’s going to work and we’re providing also our first responders and much of our staff to be here as well. I’m sure all of that overtime is going to be covered under the CARES Act. But we’re happy to do it. We’re glad that people are coming out and wanting to get the vaccines,” he said.

Coviello said the site got a lot more of the vaccine than expected. It was slated to receive 300 but ended up with between 900 and 1,000.

Before you head out to try to get a vaccine, the Florida Department of Health in Lee County wants you to fill out a pre-vaccination checklist. It asks if you’ve had any other vaccines in the last two weeks, including your flu shot. The Centers for Disease Control recommends you wait 14 days between any vaccines. If you got the flu vaccine in that time, that’s one circumstance in which you could be turned away.

The morning line for the COVID-19 vaccine in Cape Coral. Credit: WINK News

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Update: Ruben Borrero has been safely located.

Original article: The Lee County Sheriff’s Office is seeking a missing Lehigh Acres man.

Ruben Borrero, 52, is a 5’7 Hispanic man weighing around 150 lbs, with short black hair and brown eyes. He was last seen at his home on Tangelo Court.

Borrero left home on foot wearing a blue jacket with a white t-shirt, beige shorts and tan tennis shoes. Those with any information on Borrero’s whereabouts are urged to call the LCSO at (239) 477-1000.

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We witnessed a kindness among those who were waiting in line overnight together for the coronavirus vaccine at Lakes Regional Library in south Fort Myers. One couple was even handing out cups of coffee to others.

The first few in line told us no there knew each other, but they have certainly been together over the past 10 months during an isolating experience.

In the line for vaccines, seniors 65 and over were together with hope, folding chairs, snacks and quiet conversations. Many people had similar stories to share.

“A friend of mine that died from the virus, he was from where I came from in Nevada,” Kit Kerkesner said. “That was a horrible way to learn. Oh, yeah, this virus is for real.”

For Kerkesner, the chance to get the vaccine felt unreal.

“I think that’s fantastic,” Kerkesener said. “Governor DeSantis, when he did the 65 and over thing, he’s got my vote for life. I don’t know what more to tell you.”

Mark Langemo and Kerkesner are now lifelong friends. It’s a bond built long before they stepped in line.

“I can’t imagine this Christmas the number of young people that didn’t have a grandmother or a grandfather or a parent at Christmas time,” Langemo said. “And for our precious eight grandkids, I didn’t want to be one of them.”

Langemo waited in line to make sure the love of his life won’t be “one of them” either.

“I’ve been concerned about her every day,” Langemo said. “You still have to go to the grocery store and do the occasional things you have to do to live life. But I’ve been incredibly concerned about her, and this is a major step in terms of being able to protect her.”

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Louisville police have taken steps that could result in the firing of two officers connected to Breonna Taylor’s death — the one who sought the no-knock search warrant that led detectives to her apartment and another found to have opened fire.

Detective Joshua Jaynes received a pretermination letter, media outlets reported Tuesday. It came after a Professional Standards Unit investigation found he had violated department procedures for preparation of a search warrant and truthfulness, his attorney said.

Detective Myles Cosgrove also received a pretermination letter, media outlets later reported, citing his attorney, Jarrod Beck. Kentucky’s attorney general has said it was Cosgrove who appeared to have fired the fatal shot at Taylor, according to ballistics tests.

The shooting death of the 26-year-old Black woman in her home sparked months of protests in Louisville alongside national protests over racial injustice and police misconduct.

Jaynes has a hearing with interim Chief Yvette Gentry and her staff on Thursday.

“Detective Jaynes and I will show up for the pretermination hearing to try to convince acting Chief Gentry that this action is unwarranted,” attorney Thomas Clay told the Courier Journal. “Jaynes did nothing wrong.”

Jaynes was not present during the shooting at Taylor’s apartment in Louisville. About 12 hours earlier, he secured a warrant with a “no-knock” clause from a judge.

In Jaynes’ pretermination letter, Gentry said, the officer committed “extreme violations of our policies, which endangered others.”

“Your actions have brought discredit upon yourself and the department,” she wrote. “Your conduct has severely damaged the image our department has established within our community.”

Officers were serving a narcotics warrant on March 13 when they shot Taylor, but no drugs or cash were found in her home. Taylor was an emergency medical worker who had settled in for the night when police busted through her door.

Former officer Brett Hankison was charged by a grand jury with wanton endangerment, a low-level felony, for firing into an adjacent apartment where people were present. The two officers who shot Taylor, according to ballistics evidence, were not charged by the grand jury. One of those officers was shot by Taylor’s boyfriend during the raid and returned fire. Taylor’s boyfriend said he thought an intruder was breaking into her apartment.

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Luke Letlow, Louisiana’s newest Republican member of the U.S. House, died Tuesday night from complications related to COVID-19 only days before being sworn into office. He was 41 years old.

Letlow spokesman Andrew Bautsch confirmed the congressman-elect’s death at Ochsner-LSU Health Shreveport.

“The family appreciates the numerous prayers and support over the past days but asks for privacy during this difficult and unexpected time,” Bautsch said in a statement. “A statement from the family along with funeral arrangements will be announced at a later time.”

The incoming congressman, elected in a December runoff and set to take office in January, was admitted to a Monroe hospital on Dec. 19 after testing positive for the coronavirus disease. He was later transferred to the Shreveport facility and placed in intensive care.

Letlow is survived by his wife, Julia Barnhill Letlow, and two children.

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Florida Department of Health in Charlotte County says it’s already booked through the start of January, as it plans to start vaccinating for the coronavirus Wednesday.

A woman we spoke to said she spent three hours trying to book a spot with no luck.

“What about all these really elderly people in their seventies, eighties and nineties that don’t have a computer or can’t see well enough to see a computer or can’t sit at a computer,” Paula De Rienzo said. “How are they going to get their vaccine?”

We went to Harold Avenue Regional Park Tuesday night, where Charlotte County is planned to give out the first round of vaccines in the morning.

On the bright side, there was no line in Charlotte County after hundreds of people successfully set up appointments. But as mentioned, it was not all smooth sailing for everyone.

We did speak to people waiting in line for vaccines at North Fort Myers Park and Recreation Center in Lee County, who were taking the chance to get the vaccine seriously.

“It’s just too scary. I’ve never in 75 years never come across anything that scares us like this, so that’s why we’re willing to wait all night to get the vaccine,” David Curtis said.

David and his wife Joanne Curtis were prepared to stay in line for 16 hours because they want their shot at normalcy.

“We got a call from one of our neighbors,” David said. “And we left within five minutes.”

“I brought some games. I brought dinner. I have breakfast for tomorrow morning,” Joanne said.

For them and lots of people their age, new vaccines aren’t something new at all.

“I was one of the kids picked in my class to be a polio pioneer. I was in second grade, I think,” David said. “The world is so different when we grew up than what you’re growing up with now.”

Streyffeler agreed with the sentiments David shared regarding the vaccine today.

“It was if the doctor told you to do it, you just did it,” said Dr. Laura Streyffeler, a clinical psychologist. “Now, people are researching differently. There’s also lots of information.”

Streyffeler said the generation that’s grown up with internet has a different view on many things, and the vaccine is no exception.

“Years ago, vaccines weren’t something that you thought about; they were just something that you did,” Streyffeler said. “You know, you vaccinate your kids before school. There are certain things that you did, and people didn’t question them the way that they researched them now.”

If you ask Joanne and David Curtis, this time around is different

“This is way more serious,” Joanne said.

“Just look at the death rate around the world and in the U.S., I mean, nobody can stop it,” David said.

As the lines keep growing over in Lee County, there are no more appointments here in Charlotte County until after Jan. 8.

The county said to check back on its website Jan. 6 to see when more appointments will open up.

The people lucky enough to book appointments will get their first dose Wednesday at Harold Avenue Regional Park.

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