Chicago Sun-Times

Some restrictio­ns lifted after state’s COVID caseload hits 3-week low

- BY MADELINE KENNEY, STAFF REPORTER mkenney@suntimes.com | @MadKenney

Chicago and most of its surroundin­g suburbs were given the green light on Monday to increase capacity at casinos, museums and big-box retailers and bring back indoor fitness classes and recreation programs as the regions were bumped to Tier 2 mitigation­s.

Indoor dining, however, remains prohibited in the Chicago area.

The loosened business restrictio­ns announced Monday by the Illinois Department of Public Health are due to a change in staffing contracts that increased hospital staffing statewide.

Under the new mitigation metrics, Regions 8, 9, 10 and 11 — which cover the Chicago area including north and west suburban Cook County — were moved from the most restrictiv­e Tier 3 to Tier 2. Meanwhile, Regions 1, 2 and 6 — or north, north-central and east-central Illinois — were bumped to Tier 1, allowing for bars and restaurant­s to open indoor service at limited capacity. Regions 3 and 5 — or westcentra­l and the southern part of the state — are returning to Phase 4 of the Restore Illinois Plan, while Regions 4 and 7 — which cover south suburban Cook County and southwest Illinois — remain in Tier 3.

“Hospital leaders have made clear the importance of staffing in their continued response to this pandemic and conveyed that staffing contracts will be extraordin­arily valuable in their ability to meet the needs of their communitie­s,” IDPH Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike said in a statement. “It is critical that we maintain this progress. With new variants of COVID-19 spreading, it is more important than ever to follow the public health guidance that keeps people safe — wear your mask and watch your distance.”

The news comes as state health officials reported 3,385 new and probable COVID-19 cases — its smallest daily caseload in over three weeks — as Illinois’ sevenday positivity rate continued to fall.

Health officials also announced an additional 50 coronaviru­s-related deaths, raising the statewide death toll to 18,258. More than half of Monday’s fatalities were reported in the Chicago area, including a Cook County man in his 30s.

Monday’s cases were found among 63,002 tests reported to the Illinois Department of Public Health over the last 24 hours, continuing an encouragin­g trend as the state continues to rebound from a record-setting resurgence in late November. The new cases bring the state’s total to 1,072,214 infections over the past 11 months.

The statewide seven-day positivity rate dropped for the 10th consecutiv­e day, down to 5.9%, the lowest it’s been since Oct. 23. That’s a decline of nearly 2 percentage points from last Monday when the rate was 7.6%.

In Illinois, 495,563 COVID-19 vaccines have been administer­ed, including 66,679 for long-term care facilities.

 ?? ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES ?? Rafi Peterson, 63, a supervisor for the outreach team at Communitie­s Partnering 4 Peace, receives his first dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine at Richard J. Daley College last Thursday.
ASHLEE REZIN GARCIA/SUN-TIMES Rafi Peterson, 63, a supervisor for the outreach team at Communitie­s Partnering 4 Peace, receives his first dose of the Pfizer-BioNTech COVID-19 vaccine at Richard J. Daley College last Thursday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States