Chicago Sun-Times

ILLINOIS VIRUS CASES JUMP TO 288; YOU COULD BE NEXT, PRITZKER SAYS

Gov warns numbers will get ‘much worse before they get better’; 2 downtown hotels stop taking customers

- BY MITCHELL ARMENTROUT, STAFF REPORTER marmentrou­t@suntimes.com | @mitchtrout Contributi­ng: Tina Sfondeles, Manny Ramos, David Struett, Nader Issa, Jake Wittich, David Roeder.

The largest single-day spike in Illinois’ number of confirmed COVID-19 cases brought the state’s total to 288 Wednesday as the viral pandemic expands its reach across the United States.

And there’s a good chance you could be next, Gov. J.B. Pritzker said, in his most pointed plea yet for residents to stay home to help stop the spread of the coronaviru­s.

“If you don’t feel well, please stay home. … You should just assume that you may have coronaviru­s. Just assume that,” Pritzker said during a news conference in downstate Murphysbor­o. “What would you do? You should self-isolate. That is the right thing to do.”

The 128 new cases extended to two new counties, Kendall and Madison, and 17 overall. Patients have ranged in age from 9 to 91, with 20 new cases dealing the latest blows to a DuPage County nursing home that has now tallied 42 cases — 30 residents and 12 staffers.

Statewide numbers will continue to jump “significan­tly” as more testing becomes available, according to Illinois Department of Public Health Director Ngozi Ezike. Just over 2,000 tests had been administer­ed as of Wednesday afternoon.

Things will get worse

“These numbers in Illinois will become much worse before they get better,” Pritzker said, calling obtaining more test kits “the biggest challenge we face.”

“Some of you might look at the illnesses and death in other countries and think, ‘Well that couldn’t happen here.’ Make no mistake: No place and no person is immune from COVID-19. The difference between where we are in our response and where other nations are is just a few weeks,” Pritzker said. “We must act with urgency.”

Some of those patients have recovered since the state’s first case was confirmed Jan. 24, but the first death in Illinois attributed to the pandemic was reported Tuesday after a 61-year-old South Side woman died at the University of Chicago Medical Center.

More campus cases

Illinois’ total also includes patients from DePaul University, Columbia College and the University of Chicago, which each reported that students, staffers or faculty members had been diagnosed with COVID-19.

Those schools are among hundreds of others that have shut down campuses — or will soon do so — following Pritzker’s order last week that closed elementary and high schools for more than 2.2 million students. While that order was through the end of the month in an effort to limit interactio­n and slow the spread of the virus, state education officials indicated later Wednesday that “there is a very real possibilit­y of the closure extending beyond March 30” as currently planned. A North Side private school reported six cases stemming from a fundraiser held earlier this month, though no students were among the confirmed carriers.

The latest Illinois toll was announced hours after President Donald Trump called himself a “wartime president” up against the virus, invoking the Defense Production Act to boost production of medical supplies.

That could be good news for thousands of Illinois service and hospitalit­y industry workers trying to scrape by after the governor’s unpreceden­ted move to shutter bars and restaurant­s except for carryout service. Several shopping malls in the metro area — including Gurnee Mills and Woodfield Mall — and a slew of department stores made plans to close, too.

First 2 downtown hotels close

Two luxury downtown hotels have stopped taking customers, citing public health concerns relating to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

The Park Hyatt Chicago, 800 Michigan Ave., and The Peninsula, 108 E. Superior St., both suspended services, according to statements on the hotels’ websites.

“The safety and well being of our guests and colleagues is always a top priority,” the Park Hyatt said, noting the hotel is no longer accepting room, restaurant, bar and other reservatio­ns until April 30. The Peninsula gave no expected timeline.

Layoffs at area hotels started around Monday, according to Michael Jacobson, CEO of the Illinois Hotel & Lodging Associatio­n.

Illinois first ‘shelter-in-place’ order

Beyond the school and business closures, the state has stopped short of a full-on “shelter-in-place” order similar to in California, but Pritzker’s office has said “the situation is being monitored on an ongoing basis.”

The situation was different in Oak Park, though, where Mayor Anan Abu-Taleb declared a local state of emergency and issued an order requiring residents to shelter in place starting March 20 through April 3.

“I do want to assure all of you, essential services will always remain available — grocery stores, pharmacies, gas stations. The things we all need will not be closing down,” Pritzker said Wednesday.

Statehouse cancels session, census delays count

That doesn’t extend to the state Capitol, though. After a hectic election day hobbled by low turnout in the wake of COVID-19 concerns, lawmakers announced the Statehouse was canceling its session next week, wiping out a second week of the legislativ­e calendar.

And an accurate count of Illinois residents could be the next casualty of the pandemic. The U.S. Census Bureau announced it was suspending its once-per-decade field operations already underway at least until April 1, to “help protect the health and safety of the American public, Census Bureau employees.”

 ??  ?? Gov. J.B. Pritzker speaks at a news conference Wednesday in downstate Belleville.
Gov. J.B. Pritzker speaks at a news conference Wednesday in downstate Belleville.
 ?? SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO ?? DePaul announced its first confirmed case of COVID-19 on Wednesday. Columbia College and the University of Chicago also reported cases.
SUN-TIMES FILE PHOTO DePaul announced its first confirmed case of COVID-19 on Wednesday. Columbia College and the University of Chicago also reported cases.

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