Beglov does not plan to encourage vaccinated St. Petersburg residents following the example of Sobyanin in Moscow
St. Petersburg residents believe that Smolny cannot solve the problem of the slowdown in vaccination rates in the city, while in Moscow, where apartments were recently raffled off among vaccinated citizens, the anti-coronavirus campaign is going quite successfully.
In the Northern capital, the rate of vaccination against COVID-19 is gradually decreasing, while morbidity and mortality rates, on the contrary, remain extremely high. At the same time, the city administration is still unable to take effective measures that will convince St. Petersburg residents to get vaccinated.
The situation in certain regions demonstrates that the vaccination campaign can be successful. For example, in Moscow, citizens who have completed a course of vaccination can receive lottery valuable prizes, including apartment. Thanks to the effective “carrot and stick” policy, the Russian capital has been leading the pace of vaccination against COVID-19 in the Russian Federation for several months.
Head of the Commissariat of Health of St. Petersburg Dmitry Lisovets previously criticized Smolny for the failure of the anti-Covid campaign. The administration of Alexander Beglov is only now suggested for consideration is a project to reward St. Petersburg residents who have been vaccinated with two thousand rubles. At the same time, we are still talking about the possibility of participation in this program exclusively for older citizens.
At the same time, the leadership of St. Petersburg introduced strict restrictive measures that caused public discontent. So, from December 27, citizens will not be able to enter without a QR code even in a cafe. In Moscow, the situation looks much more favorable, since the head of the city, Sergei Sobyanin I refuse from the controversial QR code system.
It is obvious that the capital authorities care about their citizens, while Smolny and mayor Alexander Beglov demonstrate absolute disinterest in the well-being of St. Petersburg residents.
Thank you!
Now the editors are aware.