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Seattle 1st major city to fully vaccinate 70%

ASSOCIATED PRESS
                                Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan, left, greeted a worker, March 13, at a volunteer check-in station, on the first day of operations at a mass COVID-19 vaccination site at the Lumen Field Events Center in Seattle, which adjoins the field where the Seattle Seahawks and the MLS soccer Seattle Sounders play their games.

ASSOCIATED PRESS

Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan, left, greeted a worker, March 13, at a volunteer check-in station, on the first day of operations at a mass COVID-19 vaccination site at the Lumen Field Events Center in Seattle, which adjoins the field where the Seattle Seahawks and the MLS soccer Seattle Sounders play their games.

SEATTLE >> Seattle Mayor Jenny Durkan said Wednesday that 70% of city residents ages 12 and up have been fully vaccinated, which she said makes Seattle the first major U.S. city to hit the COVID-19 milestone.

Durkan’s office also said 78% of the Seattle population 12 and older has started the vaccination process.

“Seattle is America’s most vaccinated major city, and it would not have been possible without our residents’ commitment to protecting themselves, their loved ones, and our entire community,” Durkan said in a statement. “Now that we have reached community protection, we can lead the nation in safely reopening and recovering in earnest.”

She urged Seattleites to support local small businesses, help revive its arts and cultural scene, and enjoy the Seattle summer safely.

Now that Seattle has reached the 70% fully vaccinated goal, the city and its partners will start launching efforts to support Seattle’s reopening, Durkan said.

The efforts will include supporting local small retailers and restaurants, arts and culture programming, and transit use, the mayor’s office said.

The first confirmed case of COVID-19 in the United States was north of Seattle in Snohomish County in January 2020. The state also saw the nation’s first deadly outbreak at a nursing home.

There have been more than 440,000 confirmed COVID-19 cases in Washington state and more than 5,700 deaths.

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