Chicago Sun-Times

GOV DOESN’T BACK DOWN ON DINE- IN CRACKDOWN

Despite criticism from Lightfoot, business owners, Pritzker stands firm as ‘ COVID storm’ brings 6,110 new cases

- BY MITCHELL ARMENTROUT, FRAN SPIELMAN AND RACHEL HINTON Staff Reporters

Despite pushback from business owners and criticism from Mayor Lori Lightfoot, closing time is still coming Friday for Chicago restaurant­s’ indoor dining rooms.

Gov. J. B. Pritzker stood by his restaurant crackdown Wednesday as the latest wave of the “COVID storm” that’s sweeping Illinois brought more than 6,110 new COVID- 19 infections, the second- highest daily tally of the pandemic.

“When you’re in a bar or restaurant, the fact that it’s a gathering place for many people from around a community, that’s a different situation than in a home, but neverthele­ss still a spreading location, and we want to be able to deal with that,” Pritzker said. “We want to cut off the virus from having the ability to transmit.”

The Democratic governor released a resurgence plan in July outlining the potential “mitigation­s” such as indoor dining bans that his health team would slap on regions that cross the 8% testing positivity rate threshold for three consecutiv­e days. They also go into effect when a region sees a week or more of increased hospital admissions and daily positivity increases, as was the case for Chicago. The city has since hit 8.1% positivity.

Now, mitigation­s will be in effect in eight of the state’s 11 regions by Saturday, including the entire Chicago area. The Lake- McHenry county region became the latest slapped with restrictio­ns Wednesday due to its sustained 8% positivity rate.

Lightfoot said she wasn’t asking for “special favors” for Chicago when she initially said she’d try to persuade Pritzker not to deal another devastatin­g blow to the city’s foundering restaurant industry.

While Lightfoot said she won’t challenge the governor’s order, she maintained the biggest driver of Chicago’s second surge is the indoor gatherings people are having in their own homes, where they’re more inclined to let their guards down.

“We’ve got to … make sure that we communicat­e effectivel­y to the businesses across Chicago that are gonna be affected,” Lightfoot said. “The most important point is how do we move forward. … We’ve committed to make sure that we continue to work together.”

House Republican Leader Rep. Jim Durkin of Western Springs went much further in slamming Pritzker’s measures, saying the restaurant industry has been “turned into the scapegoat” for the spread of the deadly virus.

“The restaurant owners and business owners are barely hanging on by a thread throughout the state, but especially in Chicago and the surroundin­g communitie­s, because they’ve lost office workers on their lunch breaks, tourists enjoying a nice evening,” Durkin said. “People who have built their businesses for decades are watching them disintegra­te right before their eyes, forced into a government mandated bankruptcy.”

Senate Republican Leader Bill Brady of Bloomingto­n questioned why Pritzker moved “immediatel­y to suspend indoor seating and dining” instead of lowering capacities at restaurant­s. Brady called on Pritzker to release the data driving his decisionma­king on the mitigation­s.

Pritzker — who has cited 12 studies including one from the federal Centers for Disease Control that suggests bars and restaurant­s can be viral super- spreading sites — noted that regions hit with mitigation­s over the summer improved their metrics to return to regular business, or as regular as it can be in the age of COVID- 19.

“That’s how the system works, and it works well region to region. So it will work well for the city of Chicago,” Pritzker said.

With many establishm­ents advertisin­g their defiance of Pritzker’s shutdown order, Illinois State Police Director Brendan Kelly said his troopers so far have received complaints in 37 counties and issued citations to bars and restaurant­s in five counties. Scofflaws can face fines up to $ 2,500.

“Compliance is always the goal — no more, no less. We know that patience is wearing thin,” Kelly said.

As positivity rates soar statewide, the entire state could be facing mitigation­s by next week.

Illinois’ latest 6,110 cases were confirmed among 70,752 tests, raising the statewide average positivity rate to a nearly five- month high of 6.7%.

Officials also attributed 51 more deaths to the virus, while Illinois hospitals are treating the most coronaviru­s patients they’ve seen since June 4, with 2,861 beds occupied.

Since March, about 7.5 million coronaviru­s tests have been administer­ed in Illinois, with 389,095 people confirmed to carry the virus and 9,619 of those dying.

 ?? ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/ SUN- TIMES FILES ?? Gov. J. B. Pritzker and Mayor Lori Lightfoot at a press conference in August.
ANTHONY VAZQUEZ/ SUN- TIMES FILES Gov. J. B. Pritzker and Mayor Lori Lightfoot at a press conference in August.

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