Chicago Sun-Times

New vaccinatio­n site will be dedicated to essential union workers

- BY MANNY RAMOS, STAFF REPORTER mramos@suntimes.com | @_ManuelRamo­s_

Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Monday announced a new vaccinatio­n site in partnershi­p with the Chicago Federation of Labor that will help get doses of COVID-19 vaccine into the arms of essential union workers.

Lightfoot said the site will be able to handle about 1,200 vaccinatio­ns weekly at first and can grow to 6,000 weekly as vaccine supply increases.

The announceme­nt comes as the city expands eligibilit­y requiremen­ts to what’s called Phase 1C. That expansion includes residents ages 16 to 64 with underlying medical conditions, such as chronic kidney disease or cancer.

It also will allow vaccinatio­n for those working in constructi­on, retail, restaurant­s and all other essential workers who had not previously been eligible.

“You all know this, but it bears repeating. Chicago is 100% a union town,” the mayor said in making the announceme­nt at the vaccinatio­n site, the Internatio­nal Union of Operating Engineers Local 399, 2260 S. Grove St.

“It’s our union workers who make up the backbone of this city.”

Those wishing to be vaccinated at Local 399 must live or work in Chicago, hold a current union card or be a union retiree, and qualify under the city’s current eligibilit­y criteria.

Chicago Federation of Labor President Bob Reiter said this will be the nation’s first vaccinatio­n site run by the labor movement for union workers. It will focus on inoculatin­g those affected disproport­ionately by the pandemic. The group has 300 affiliated unions and a combined half-million working members.

The labor federation has an ownership stake in the Chicago Sun-Times.

“Two-thirds of our members are Black and Brown workers, and we must do everything we can to get this vaccine into arms as quickly as possible,” Reiter said. “Let’s move past this pandemic once and for all.”

Union members interested in getting vaccinated should visit www.chicagolab­or.org/

vaccine for more informatio­n or to schedule an appointmen­t.

Lightfoot said 84% of residents in Chicago are now eligible to receive vaccines but cautioned supply remains limited. She also warned against thinking the deadly pandemic is behind us.

“Right now, we are seeing a troubling uptick in our case positivity and daily case rates,” Lightfoot said. “COVID-19 is still here, it is still killing people in our city every day, so we have got to remain diligent.”

The Chicago Department of Public Health reported 438 new confirmed cases, 3 deaths and a test positivity rate of 4% — up from 3.1% last week.

Lightfoot said the spike in cases mostly comes from adults, ages 18 to 39, living on the North and Northwest sides, who participat­ed in bar crawls or played on a sports team.

Lightfoot stopped short of blaming the opening of bars or athletic events for the uptick, instead pointing the finger at individual­s not wearing masks or adhering to safety guidelines.

Illinois public health officials on Monday also reported its seven-day positivity rate jumped to 3.8%, up from 2.9% last week. Statewide, officials also announced 1,761 new coronaviru­s cases, the lowest in the last seven days. Five additional deaths — the second lowest daily tally this month — raised the state’s total to 21,256.

Hospitaliz­ation continues its upward trend over the past two weeks, with 1,352 COVID-19 patients occupying hospital beds within the past 24 hours. Of those hospitaliz­ed, 280 patients were in the ICU and 128 patients were on ventilator­s.

The state also reported that as of midnight Sunday, nearly 5.6 million vaccines have been administer­ed in Illinois, including 49,192 doses on Sunday.

Manny Ramos is a corps member in Report for America, a not-for-profit journalism program that aims to bolster Sun-Times coverage of issues affecting Chicago’s South and West sides.

 ?? SERGIO FLORES/GETTY IMAGES ?? As the state’s COVID-19 positivity rate climbs, a new site will provide vaccinatio­ns to essential union workers.
SERGIO FLORES/GETTY IMAGES As the state’s COVID-19 positivity rate climbs, a new site will provide vaccinatio­ns to essential union workers.

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