Chicago Sun-Times

S. Side community groups left out of city initiative push for more vaccine access

- BY ELVIA MALAGÓN, STAFF REPORTER emalagon@suntimes.com | @ElviaMalag­on Elvia Malagón’s reporting on social justice and income inequality is made possible by a grant from The Chicago Community Trust.

Community members from South Side neighborho­ods left out of the Protect Chicago Plus initiative are calling on the city to include them in COVID-19 vaccine drives.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot launched the program in January as a way to reach Black and Latino residents who have been hard hit by the coronaviru­s pandemic. As part of the plan, the city targeted 15 communitie­s that will get additional resources and vaccine drives that open eligibilit­y to anyone living in those neighborho­ods.

Arturo Carrillo, from the Brighton Park Neighborho­od Council, said the initiative has pitted communitie­s against each other. Brighton Park was identified by the city as a high vulnerabil­ity community, but it wasn’t ranked in the top 15 neighborho­ods and was left out of the initiative.

A coalition of 41 community organizati­ons, including the council, plans to send a letter to Lightfoot asking for the city to expand the initiative to more communitie­s.

“It leaves out health resources, including the vaccine, health care profession­als and public health education from neighborin­g communitie­s,” Carrillo said during a Tuesday morning virtual news conference. “Instead our organizati­ons demand that the plan prioritize the most vulnerable communitie­s in the city while developing a citywide framework to ensure that the delivery of vaccines to Black and Brown communitie­s can be guaranteed for those who have not yet been vaccinated.”

Carrillo argued that the city does have the resources to expand the initiative to other communitie­s, pointing to figures that last month showed the city used $281 million in federal COVID-19 relief money to cover Chicago police personnel costs.

Chicago Department of Public Health Commission­er Allison Arwady touted the initiative as helping at least three community areas improve inoculatio­n rates.

“We still have a ways to go, don’t get me wrong, but I couldn’t be more pleased with the progress we are seeing,” Arwady said during a Tuesday news conference.

The initial weeks of the vaccine distributi­on showed few South Side and West Side residents were receiving the shots. The percentage of Black and Latino residents inoculated has grown. As of Feb. 24, Black residents made up 21% of the city’s population who had received a first dose of a COVID-19 vaccine, according to city data. Latinos made up 28% of the first dose vaccines administer­ed so far while white residents made up 40%, according to the city’s data.

In South Shore, there were 4,445 residents in the 60649 Zip Code who had gotten their first COVID-19 shot, which is less than 10% of the population, according to city data.

Linda Young, a South Shore resident, said she wasn’t sure why her neighborho­od was left out of the initiative though it was included in earlier equity programs. South Shore is considered a “medium vulnerabil­ity” community by the city.

“Our community continues to be one of those impacted by chronic disease rates, bad air quality, mortality rates are high and we also have disparity in vaccinatio­n sites,” Young said.

Carmen Orozco, a health promoter with the Brighton Park Neighborho­od Council, said some residents in the Southwest Side neighborho­od still aren’t eligible for the vaccine though they work in restaurant­s or in janitorial services. She said residents have been asking her about the vaccine, but she feels distressed not knowing when this community will have access to it.

Amelia Nieto-Gomez, from the Alliance of the Southeast, said residents in communitie­s like South Chicago and the East Side need neighborho­od vaccinatio­n sites because of transporta­tion issues. Many also lack internet access and need assistance securing vaccine appointmen­ts, Nieto-Gomez said.

Dr. Marina Del Rios, from Illinois Unidos and a UIC emergency room doctor, thinks the city should have used different metrics to evaluate the risk level of communitie­s by considerin­g the mortality rates for Black and Latino residents. She also thinks the city should have factored in that some Latinos might be undocument­ed or lack health insurance, resulting in this community being more hesitant to go to a hospital.

“We need more resources in order to save more lives,” Del Rios said. “I don’t want to be continuing to see people from my community dying young for a disease that is now largely preventabl­e if we can just get vaccines (into) the arms of more people.”

 ??  ?? A physician for Lawndale Christian Health Center prepares to administer the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine last month at a Pacific Garden Mission, 1458 S. Canal St.
A physician for Lawndale Christian Health Center prepares to administer the Moderna COVID-19 vaccine last month at a Pacific Garden Mission, 1458 S. Canal St.
 ??  ?? Dr. Marina Del Rios
Dr. Marina Del Rios
 ??  ?? Arturo Carrillo
Arturo Carrillo
 ??  ?? Linda Young
Linda Young

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