Chicago Sun-Times

City to close 61 public libraries this weekend

- BY JAKE WITTICH, STAFF REPORTER jwittich@suntimes.com | @JakeWittic­h Contributi­ng: Fran Spielman

Sixty-one Chicago Public Library locations will close this weekend as the city scales back its offering of services amid the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Chicago libraries serve as social safety nets for our communitie­s — where our young people become lifelong learners and technology centers connect our residents to the world,” Mayor Lori Lightfoot said in a statement. “Although some libraries will close to mitigate the spread of COVID-19, we know residents and neighborho­ods will continue to need access to the resources they provide.”

All libraries will be closed Sunday, and then just 20 locations will reopen Monday but with scaledback hours from 10 a.m. to 6 p.m. Mondays through Thursdays and 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. on Fridays.

Just three libraries — the Harold Washington Library Center, Sulzer Regional and Woodson Regional — will be open on Saturdays from 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. and Sundays 1-5 p.m.

“To ensure Chicagoans in dire need are still able to rely on libraries for basic services, we will continue to provide limited library services in strategic locations spread across the city,” said CPL Commission­er Andrea Telli.

Public computers will be regularly sanitized and have been moved further apart to ensure “social distancing,” the recommende­d practice of staying at least six feet apart from others to avoid passing COVID-19.

Each library will also determine a maximum capacity of visitors to remain consistent with city health department guidelines.

“We are confident that CPL can provide these services in a way that is safe and sanitary for library employees and patrons alike,” said Department of Public Health Commission­er Alison Arwady. “Still, we continue to urge Chicagoans to stay home unless they absolutely must go out so that we can continue to work to limit the spread of COVID-19.”

The closures come after Chicago library employees on Tuesday accused Lightfoot and Telli of being “careless” by keeping Chicago Public Libraries open.

In an emailed statement, Roberta Lynch, executive director of AFSCME Council 31, the union representi­ng roughly 900 library employees, called for all 81 of its libraries to be closed down.

Lynch said the “vital role that our city’s public libraries play” should be “balanced against the urgent need to protect the health and well-being of library patrons and employees.”

“The benefits of keeping even a reduced number of libraries open cannot justify the risks involved at a time when both the governor and mayor have stressed the urgency of preventing community transmissi­on to slow this pandemic,” Lynch said.

The following libraries will remain open:

♦ Harold Washington Library Center, 400 S. State St.;

♦ Sulzer Regional, 4455 N. Lincoln Ave.;

♦ Woodson Regional, 9525 S. Halsted St.;

♦ Edgewater, 6000 N. Broadway;

♦ Lincoln Belmont, 1659 W. Melrose St.;

♦ Albany Pk., 3401 W. Foster Ave.;

♦ Roden, 6083 N. Northwest Highway;

♦ West Belmont, 3104 N. Narraganse­tt Ave.;

♦ Humboldt Park, 1605 N. Troy St.;

♦ Austin, 5615 W. Race Ave.;

♦ Douglass, 3353 W. 13th St.;

♦ Lozano, 1805 S. Loomis St.;

♦ King, 3436 S. King Drive; ♦ Brighton Park, 4314 S. Archer Ave.;

♦ West Lawn, 4020 W. 63rd St.;

♦ Thurgood Marshall, 7506 S. Racine Ave.;

♦ Whitney Young, 415 E. 79th St.;

♦ South Chicago, 9055 S. Houston Ave.;

♦ West Pullman, 830 W. 119th St.; and

♦ Vodak-East Side, 3710 E. 106th St.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States