Daily Southtown

Pritzker still ‘in a pause’ on mitigation rollbacks

Governor waiting to see holiday impact despite dip in virus rates in most regions

- By Sarah Mansur

SPRINGFIEL­D — The statewide COVID-19 positivity rate ticked down slightly on Tuesday to 8.5%, marking nearly a month that the rate has stayed below10%.

The rolling seven-day average statewide case positivity rate dropped by one-tenth of a percentage point, from 8.6% the day before. The rate has remained below 10% since Dec. 8, and well below second-wave highs of 13.2% in mid-November.

On Tuesday, the Illinois Department of Public Health reported 6,839 new confirmed and probable cases of the virus, among 991,719 total cases and more than 13.6 million tests since the pandemic began.

The COVID-19 death toll has reached 16,959, including 126 additional deaths reported Tuesday.

As of Tuesday, only four of the state’s 11 mitigation regions had not met the criteria Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s administra­tion provided to return to Tier 2 mitigation­s, from Tier 3.

Those areas are Region 4, which covers five southweste­rn counties along the Missouri border; Region 5, which spans 20 counties in southern Illinois; Region 6, which covers 21 southeaste­rn counties reaching the Indiana border; and Region 9, which includes McHenry and Lake counties.

Jordan Abudayyeh, the governor’s spokespers­on, said in an email Monday that the administra­tion is “in a pause in mitigation moves to see what impact holiday gatherings have on the data.”

The entire state came under the more restrictiv­e Tier 3 public health measures on Nov. 30 in an effort to slow the increasing number of COVID-19 cases and hospitaliz­ations.

Under Tier 3, businesses — such as fitness centers and hotels — must follow 25% capacity limits, and bars and restaurant­s are closed to indoor service. Tier 2 mitigation­s also impose a ban on indoor service at bars and restaurant­s.

In addition, Tier 3 mitigation­s shut down casinos, gaming terminals, theaters, performing arts centers and indoor museums and amusement centers, among other indoor recreation places.

The criteria for moving to Tier 2 requires a test positivity rate less than 12% for three consecutiv­e days, greater than 20% intensive care unit and medical or surgical bed availabili­ty for three consecutiv­e days, and a decline in the number of COVID-19 patients in the hospital in at least 7 out of the last 10 days.

Abudayyeh also criticized the Sangamon County Health Department for issuing new mitigation orders allowing for bars and restaurant­s to provide indoor service at 25% capacity that went into effect on Sunday.

“As the governor has said, the public health experts need to closely monitor the data after the holidays to gauge the spread of the virus. Once the experts agree that we have averted another surge, then regions will be able to move back to lower tiers in the mitigation plan,” she said in an emailed statement. “It’s time for local officials to step up and remember that being a leader doesn’t mean making the easy choice, it means doing everything you can to protect the people who trust you to serve them.”

Sangamon County is in Region 3, which encompasse­s 18 counties in central Illinois. The county reported a 6.5% rolling seven-day positivity rate on Tuesday, and the rate has remained at 6.5% or less for seven consecutiv­e days. The positivity rate has fallen considerab­ly from a high of 16.8% on Nov. 14.

The new mitigation orders in Sangamon County require establishm­ents to follow public health measures, such as maintainin­g six-feet social distance and wearing face coverings indoors when not seated. They come as lawmakers are set for a Friday return for a legislativ­e session.

Meanwhile, IDPH reported there were 3,905 people hospitaliz­ed statewide with COVID-19 as of Monday night, a decrease of 43 from the day prior.

There were 800 intensive care beds in use by COVID-19 patients as of Monday night, a decrease of 16 from the day prior. That left 24.3% of ICU beds open statewide.

COVID-19 patients occupied 457 ventilator­s as of Monday night, a decrease of 14 from the day prior.

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