KEY POINTS
  • FEMA intends to award two Indefinite Delivery-Indefinite Quantity awards with a total value of about $3 billion to contractors that can provide trained vaccinators to help with the Covid-19 vaccine rollout.
  • FEMA said it anticipates accepting bids by mid-February and hopes to award the contracts in early to mid-March.
  • President Biden announced last month his administration's plan to deploy FEMA to build and help staff vaccine sites in a move to ramp up the pace of vaccinations.
Spc. Katherine Deskins of the Nevada Army National Guard administers a Moderna COVID-19 vaccination to Federal Emergency Management Agency Urban Search and Rescue Personnel Director Dennis West on the first day of Clark County's pilot vaccination program at Cashman Center on January 14, 2021 in Las Vegas, Nevada.

The Federal Emergency Management Agency is seeking bids on two contracts worth $3 billion to hire thousands of medical personnel to help staff federal and state Covid vaccine sites around the country.

The agency expects to start taking bids as soon as next week and hopes to award the contracts in early to mid-March, according to a 13-page description of the contract released this week to gauge industry interest. A representative for FEMA confirmed to CNBC that the agency is "proactively engaging with industry" to prepare to help state and federally managed vaccination sites administer the shots.