Nonprofit organizations join in vaccination effort

Small Towns
Contact(s)

Nina Lanuza, community organizing associate, ninal@cfra.org, 402.380.0785; or Rhea Landholm, brand marketing and communications manager, rheal@cfra.org, 402.687.2100 ext 1025

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SCHUYLER, NEBRASKA – With more than 36 languages spoken in Schuyler, Nebraska, population 6,211, community organizations, businesses, and volunteers have pitched in to assist at the weekly COVID-19 vaccination clinic.

Staff from the Center for Rural Affairs and other area nonprofit organizations are on hand week after week to help residents fill out the registration paperwork and to make sure they understand what is needed.

“People in the community know us and trust us,” said Alejandrina Lanuza, community organizing associate at the Center for Rural Affairs, who speaks Spanish and English. “We want to make sure everyone has access to the information no matter what language they speak.”

Additional interpreters, who speak various languages, are a phone call away.

Schuyler is home to meatpacking plant workers, and Lanuza said certain companies are encouraging all employees to get vaccinated. They are also sending support staff to help with translations.

“Meatpacking plants across the country became COVID-19 hotspots early in the pandemic and continue to pose a risk,” she said. “We want to ensure these employees and their families have the opportunity to get vaccinated.”

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