MASK UP, ILLINOIS! VAX UP, TEACHERS!
Pritzker to order indoor masking for everyone 2 and older, plus mandatory vaccinations for educators from kindergarten to college
Gov J.B. Pritzker on Thursday plans to announce a COVID-19 vaccine mandate for all K-12 and higher education employees as well as a statewide indoor mask mandate for everyone 2 and older, sources with knowledge of the announcement told the Chicago Sun-Times.
That announcement, which is planned for Thursday morning, would come just two days after the Democratic governor sidestepped questions about extending his limited coronavirus vaccine mandate to all state workers.
The Illinois Federation of Teachers and the Illinois Education Association, the two statewide teachers unions, welcomed the vaccine mandate to help “provide the greatest possible level of safety” for in-person school.
“The surge of COVID-19 cases in our state reminds us that this vaccine mandate is a public health imperative,” the unions said in a joint statement. “To implement it properly, widespread education and access to vaccines will be essential. For members who cannot, or will not, get vaccinated, we are glad to see the governor has implemented twice weekly COVID testing.”
The labor organizations said they would work with their locals to negotiate the terms and implementation of the mandate in districts, colleges and universities.
The facial covering requirement would apply across Illinois to everyone aged 2 and over, regardless of vaccination status. Chicago and suburban Cook County are already under comparable masking mandates. Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle opted to return to them last week.
New vaccine mandates and a return to masking are hot topics as COVID-19 cases rise across Illinois, fueled largely by the more highly contagious Delta variant. All of the state’s 102 counties now fall under the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention’s high transmission category, painting the state’s public health map a troubling coat of red.
On Tuesday, Pritzker warned of “significantly greater mitigations” and a move back to earlier, precautionary phases if the surge in COVID-19 patients overwhelms hospitals and intensive care units, saying that he and others are “consistently looking at the menu of options that we may need to impose in order to bring down the numbers.”
“I will remind you that if we are not able to bring these numbers down, if hospitals continue to fill, if the hospital beds and ICUs get full like they are in Kentucky — that’s just next door to Illinois — if that happens, we’re going to have to impose significantly greater mitigations,” Pritzker said at an unrelated Tuesday news conference.
Illinois saw 4,451 new coronavirus cases on Wednesday, inching closer to the 4,904 daily caseload reported Friday, which was the state’s highest in seven months.
Chicago Public Schools is already requiring its employees to get a shot unless they have a valid medical or religious reason. Mayor Lori Lightfoot on Wednesday extended that mandate to all city employees.
Vaccine mandates — along with mask requirements — have been a hotly contested issue in school districts statewide.
Even before this announcement, tension has developed between state officials and some suburban and downstate schools where educators and parents have argued for more autonomy in making safety decisions.
The state earlier this week put several districts on probation for initially refusing to follow the governor’s mask mandate for school settings, and they went as far as revoking recognition for a suburban private school.