It was well past midnight when Kathleen Riley – after hours and hours of trying to sign her elderly parents up to get their Covid-19 vaccines on the state appointment website using her desktop computer, tablet and cellphone – was finally able to even get on the site and set up appointments for them at ECC South.
It then occurred to Riley that the middle of the night might be the only chance to get such appointments, and she wondered if she might be able to help some other people, too.
"Then I did it for my brother, who is a teacher, and then my sister-in-law, who is double transplant recipient who could not get one anywhere," Riley said.
There is no question that the vaccination process in Buffalo and across the United States has been a mess, but it has been especially difficult for older people who are now eligible to receive the shots but often don't have the technical know-how to figure out how to get them.
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In the weeks since, Riley has been trying to help as many people as she can sign up for vaccine appointments.
Vaccine-eligible people have been able to make appointments to get inoculated, but limited vaccine supply means many will be waiting for some time.
"I just started messaging people I know and saying, 'Hey, is there someone you need help with?' " Riley said.
She thinks she has so far helped about 18 people get their shots.
"When I make an appointment for somebody else, I understand it as a gift. It's a gift I can give," she said.
In New York State, 1.7 million vaccinations have been given during the first six weeks they have been available, Gov. Andrew M. Cuomo said.
"It's going very, very, very well," Cuomo said Friday at a news briefing from Albany.
But it isn't easy for anyone – especially older people with limited computer skills – to get them.
There are strict regulations on who is eligible to get appointments. First, front-line health care workers and residents and staff at nursing homes were the only ones eligible. Starting Jan. 11, people over 65, first responders, teachers, grocery workers and other "essential workers" became eligible.
Erie County opened two clinics at ECC North and ECC South, but also directed people over 65 to sign up at local pharmacies. The state also opened up a mass vaccination site at University at Buffalo's South Campus.
But before the end of the week, the county started running out of vaccine and began canceling appointments.
A couple of weeks ago, after morning mass at St. Katharine Drexel Church in East Lovejoy, Riley and her mother, Mary, who is 80, were talking about their concerns that the appointments Riley had just stayed up to make for them could end up canceled.
Another parishioner, Sandy Ferranti, 78, overheard them and said she was vaccinated at her local pharmacy. The pharmacist had told Ferranti that they were experiencing many cancellations, so the drug store set up a waiting list. The pharmacist asked Ferranti if she would like to sign up and the next day, Ferranti got her first vaccine.
Riley reached out to the same pharmacy and got her parents on the waiting list there. Within 24 hours, they got their shots.
"Delighted," Mary Riley said about how she felt after getting the injection in her arm. She felt a little soreness for a couple of days, and that was it, she said.
Riley got vaccinated, too, which she felt conflicted about. She's a teacher, but has been on family leave since Christmas to take care of her parents. The pharmacist who gave the shots to Riley's parents explained that the vaccines she had in stock were about to expire.
"We are going to waste this," the pharmacist said.
Riley has been spreading the word to fellow parishioners and friends and getting them on the drug store wait list, too.
She has also been busy figuring how to get other loved ones in other parts of the state vaccinated.
The online tools are maddening, she said, and she can't imagine how elderly people who aren't tech savvy would do it.
Anyone who wants a standard Covid-19 test can get one from the county or the state. It's easy, free and results come relatively fast.
"It's either crashing or it's 'no appointments available' and then it would pop up ... and you have to click it super fast and then type in your name and you'd have to hit next right away," she said.
Riley is well aware that she is fortunate to be in the position to help her parents get vaccinated.
She isn't working at the moment and she has the ability to stay home with her parents. She is able to afford a computer, tablet and cellphone and has reliable Wi-Fi, something many poor people in Buffalo don't have.
It is why she has been trying to help as many people as she can, even if it means being up at 3 a.m. to sign someone up for a vaccine.
"I can sleep another week. I don't have a job. My parents take afternoon naps," she said. "It's a blessing that this confluence of realities in my life allows this. The least I can do is help other people."
Maki Becker

