Chicago Sun-Times

Preckwinkl­e vetoes plan to give addresses of COVID-19 patients to first responders

County Board president nixes plan that would have given addresses of COVID-positive patients to first responders

- RACHEL HINTON REPORTS,

Just days after rare defiance from the Cook County Board, Toni Preckwinkl­e on Tuesday issued her first veto in 10 years as board president, nixing a resolution that would provide the addresses of COVID19-positive patients to first responders in suburban Cook County.

The Hyde Park Democrat said she never expected the resolution to pass and decided over the weekend to veto it. Its impact on the county’s black and brown communitie­s — as well as warnings from public health officials — drove her decision.

“We have to listen to the people whose job it is to protect us in these times of crisis ... and they have been quite clear from the very beginning that this didn’t make any sense from a public health perspectiv­e,” she said.

Her veto sparked applause from the American Civil Liberties Union and disappoint­ment from the Democratic commission­er who sponsored the ordinance.

When the measure passed last Thursday over her objections, Preckwinkl­e said she was “profoundly disappoint­ed.”

The resolution, titled Share Addresses for Emergencie­s with First Responders, would have provided first responders in the jurisdicti­on of the county’s Department of Public Health access only to the addresses of those who’ve tested positive for the virus. That area includes 127 municipali­ties and 2.5 million residents.

Preckwinkl­e cited conversati­ons with the county’s health department and its decision to follow guidelines from the Illinois Department of Public Health as part of her reasoning to veto the measure, which the 17-member County Board passed with bipartisan support.

“As we struggle with the pandemic, it’s been catastroph­ic for our country . ... We can’t just give in to our fears,” Preckwinkl­e said.

The measure sparked debate over protecting police officers, firefighte­rs, paramedics and other first responders against the need to protect the public’s right to privacy.

Cook County Commission­er Scott Britton, who sponsored the measure, said Tuesday he was “disappoint­ed” by the veto but he doesn’t plan to fight it.

“I think the thing we have to try to do right now is try to get all of the [personal protective equipment] to our first responders that we possibly can so that they’re protected,” Britton said. “I think that’s going to be the emphasis of what we do going forward.”

Last week, the Glenview Democrat acknowledg­ed the “civil rights issues that are raised” by the resolution. At the time, Britton said he’d like to be able to say “that we don’t have to worry about overreach by the government, that we don’t have to worry about inherent racism in the system.” He couldn’t do that, but argued that the resolution provides some limits.

For Preckwinkl­e, that acknowledg­ement didn’t go far enough.

“I don’t see how anyone who understand­s the endemic nature of racism in this country and the discrimina­tion that black and brown people have experience­d, will assume that this resolution is somehow going to be immune from that discrimina­tion and endemic racism,” Preckwinkl­e said last week, unsuccessf­ully urging commission­ers to vote against the measure. “So for those reasons, there’s no way ... that I would encourage anyone to support [the resolution.]”

Despite the plea, seven Democratic commission­ers and the board’s two Republican­s voted for the measure. Seven Democrats voted against it; one voted present.

Preckwinkl­e’s veto is her first since the start of her tenure as Cook County Board president in 2010. She said the measure could give first responders a false sense of security when out on the job since some coronaviru­s cases are asymptomat­ic.

Colleen Connell, executive director of ACLU Illinois, said she “applauds President Preckwinkl­e for prioritizi­ng the public health and safety of all residents.”

The organizati­on explored options to halt the resolution after it passed, including legal action.

“It is in everybody’s best interest, including first responders, to treat every contact with a member of the public as though they are potentiall­y COVID-positive,” Connell said.

Dr. Rachel Rubin, one of the leaders of the county’s Department of Public Health, said that while certain types of personal protective equipment are in demand, at this point the county has a “sufficient” supply to equip first responders and other health care workers.

“Believe me, first responders of all various classifica­tions are at the top of our minds, the top of our priority lists absolutely,” Rubin said. “We take their safety to be of paramount importance, and that’s why we’re saying that they have to be ready for every single encounter they have with the public and they have to assume that everybody is positive . ... They need to be prepared, and that’s part of being a first responder is being prepared.”

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 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/ SUN-TIMES ?? Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/ SUN-TIMES Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e

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