Thursday 4 February 2021

United Kingdom: Network Rail volunteers help set up mass vaccination facility in Exeter

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A team of Network Rail workers have played their part in tackling Covid-19 by volunteering to help set up the new large-scale vaccination centre near Exeter, Devon.

Between 18 and 22 January, workers from Network Rail volunteered their time to unload around 100 pallets of equipment from articulated lorries and set it up inside the main building at Westpoint Exeter.

Volunteers worked tirelessly to complete a range of tasks such as assembling furniture, laying out signage and constructing the vaccination pods to help ensure that the facility, just off the M5 motorway in Exeter, would be ready to open on Tuesday 26 January.

This latest contribution from Network Rail follows its volunteering efforts last year when volunteers helped transform a former DIY store in Exeter into the region’s new Nightingale Hospital.

Nick Millington, Network Rail’s Director of Safety Taskforce, which coordinated Network Rail’s volunteering efforts, said: “We are so proud to have played a part in helping set up this hugely important vaccination centre in Exeter. Throughout the pandemic, colleagues right across Network Rail have worked tirelessly to help keep our trains and stations running safely for the benefit of our passengers, and we were delighted to have the opportunity to continue contributing towards overcoming Covid-19 away from the tracks.

It was immensely rewarding to have helped build the Nightingale Hospital in Exeter last year, and to see so many colleagues pull together again in a similar fashion speaks volumes of the selfless individuals who have contributed their time to get this vaccination facility up and running”.

Mike Gallop, Network Rail’s Wales & Western Interim Managing Director, said: “I would like to commend my Network Rail colleagues for their dedication and commitment in supporting the NHS in Devon to set up this life saving vaccination centre. I look forward to seeing the first people be vaccinated and am truly hopeful this facility helps protect the people of the south west from Covid-19 and enables all of us to return to normality as soon as is safely possible”.

Darryn Allcorn, Devon’s Lead Chief Nurse, said: “We’re very grateful to all the people from Network Rail who volunteered to help set up the vaccination centre at Westpoint. It was a fantastic effort by all, and our new centres mean we are on track to further increase the scale and pace of the vaccination programme in Devon”.

(Source: Network Rail)

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