- Washington state has partnered with Seattle-based coffee giant
Starbucks on its COVID-19 vaccine rollout. - Several Starbucks staff will work full-time on the rollout, choosing and designing vaccination sites.
- "I just did the math, and figured out at this rate of vaccination, it's going to take six, seven, eight years for this country to get vaccinated," Starbucks' CEO Kevin Johnson told NBC News.
Coffee giant Starbucks will help with Washington's COVID-19 vaccine rollout, in a partnership announced Monday by state governor Jay Inslee.
"Several" Starbucks employees will work full-time to help choose sites for vaccination, and help with the design of those sites, Starbucks said at a press briefing, per Forbes.
Kevin Johnson, CEO of Starbucks, approached the state to offer help. "I just did the math, and figured out at this rate of vaccination, it's going to take six, seven, eight years for this country to get vaccinated," Johnson said. "So we have to dramatically scale this up and accelerate the progress."
Starbucks is headquartered in Seattle, Washington, and the partnership is unique to the state.
The Starbucks deal is one of a number of state partnerships with private companies announced Monday to try to get more Washington residents their shot. Microsoft, also headquartered in Washington, will supply technological expertise, and Kaiser Permanente will provide
Inslee said Monday the state wanted to give 45,000 vaccine doses every day, according to NBC News. So far, more than 242,000 COVID-19 vaccine shots have been given in Washington state, which has a population of 7.6 million people.
Across the US, 12 million shots have been administered, according to CDC data - a figure that falls short of President Donald Trump's target to immunize 20 million Americans by the end of 2020.
"Starbucks is not a healthcare company, but we do operate 33,000 stores at scale, serving 100 million customers per week," Johnson said at the press briefing, per Forbes.