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NFL offers Biden all 30 football stadiums as mass Covid vaccination sites

Sofi Stadium, home of the Los Angeles Rams in Inglewood, California.

Keith Birmingham | MediaNews Group | Getty Images

The National Football League told President Joe Biden that it is making all of its 32 football stadiums available a mass coronavirus vaccinations sites for the general public.

Currently, seven NFL teams are hosting vaccinations for Covid-19 at or near their stadiums.

“The NFL and our 32 member clubs are committed to doing our part to ensure that vaccines are as widely available in our communities as possible,” NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell wrote in a letter Thursday to Biden.

“We can expand our efforts to stadiums more effectively because many of our clubs have offered their facilities previously as COVID testing centers as well as election sites over the past several months,” Goodell wrote.

His letter said that each National Football League team would coordinate with local, state and federal health officials on the vaccination efforts at the stadiums.

The commissioner noted that the league will have as guests 7,500 vaccinated health-care workers from across the country at this Sunday’s Super Bowl game between the Kansas City Chiefs and the Tampa Bay Buccaneers.

Goodell said those workers were invited “in gratitude for their heroic service and to highlight the importance of vaccinations as our country recovers from the pandemic.”

The NFL referred questions to the White House when contacted by CNBC. The White House had no immediate comment on Goodell’s letter.

The current vaccination sites are being hosted by the Arizona Cardinals, the Atlanta Falcons, Baltimore Ravens, Carolina Panthers, Houston Texans, Miami Dolphins and New England Patriots.

The football stadiums would join a host of professional baseball stadiums across the country offering Covid-19 vaccines to the public.

On Friday, a temporary mass vaccination site opened at Yankee Stadium in the Bronx borough of New York City. Another site at the Mets home at Citi Field in Queens was scheduled to begin offering shots at the end of January, but its opening was postponed because the city lacked enough vaccines.

Los Angeles turned Dodger Stadium into a mass vaccination site in January after it served as a mass Covid-19 testing site for eight months.

—CNBC’s Noah Higgins-Dunn contributed to this report

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