We remain on the same upward trajectory we've followed since the beginning of February:
We have vaccinated about 90 million people so far. Another 30 million have already been infected with COVID-19, and epidemiologists estimate that there may be yet another 30 million who have been infected but never knew it. That's 150 million people who have some level of immunity to the virus. By the end of April that should be up to 230 million or so, which might be virtually every adult who's willing to be vaccinated. After that it's mostly a matter of vaccinating children.
That's still a ways off, and it's not clear how much danger it represents. The same is true of all the variants currently circulating. Nonetheless, it seems likely that by the end of June things will be mostly back to normal.
Except, of course, for the fact that the rest of the world will still have plenty of COVID-19 cases. We'll never be completely safe until the entire world is vaccinated, and even at that point the virus is likely to be endemic in the human population. It's possible that annual COVID-19 shots will become as routine as annual flu shots.