Chicago Sun-Times

PRITZKER ENDING PANDEMIC DISASTER STATUS

Governor warns ‘COVID-19 has not disappeare­d’

- BY TINA SFONDELES, CHIEF POLITICAL REPORTER tsfondeles@suntimes.com | @TinaSfon

Gov. J.B. Pritzker on Tuesday announced the end of the state’s COVID-19 disaster proclamati­on — almost three years after first declaring a public health emergency in Illinois during the early surge of the pandemic.

Pritzker’s decision piggybacks on the White House’s announceme­nt on Monday that it will end the COVID-19 national and public health emergencie­s on May 11. Illinois’ public health emergency declaratio­n will also end that day.

But the Democratic governor, who endured his fair share of criticism over stayat-home orders, mask and vaccine requiremen­ts, also warned that the pandemic isn’t quite over. As of Tuesday, 36,091 Illinois residents had died of COVID-19, according to the Illinois Department of Public Health.

“Let me be clear: COVID-19 has not disappeare­d,” Pritzker said in a statement. “It is still a real and present danger to people with compromise­d immune systems — and I urge all Illinoisan­s to get vaccinated or get their booster shots if they have not done so already.”

Under the disaster proclamati­on Pritzker first enacted in 2020, Illinois received federal reimbursem­ents for state pandemic response costs. Illinois was also able to use the State Disaster Relief Fund to cover costs and reimbursem­ents to the Illinois National Guard.

And the proclamati­on enabled the state to activate a mutual aid network — the State Emergency Operations Center — to deploy resources across the state. The proclamati­on also gave Pritzker the power to activate the Illinois National Guard and expedited the procuremen­t process for items during the pandemic, including testing supplies, masks and even body bags.

And beyond the bureaucrat­ic red tape, it also allowed Pritzker to put in place multiple executive orders, which the governor’s office deemed necessary “to protect public health and safety.” That included Pritzker’s March 20, 2020, decision to enact a statewide shelter-in-place order for the state.

Should the pandemic worsen, Pritzker would have to make another disaster proclamati­on in order to issue those sorts of executive orders again.

Congress in December pushed back on efforts to extend public assistance programs tied to the public health emergency, as part of a government funding package. That included Medicaid redetermin­ation and SNAP benefits. States can begin unenrollin­g residents who no longer qualify for Medicaid starting April 1, and will be given 14 months to review their eligibilit­y.

Illinois has also ramped down the licensing of medical profession­als with the Illinois Department of Financial and Profession­al Regulation. That had been expedited to help expand the medical workforce at the height of the pandemic.

Pritzker ended several mandates last year. In September 2022, the governor rolled back his final classroom COVID-19 mitigation by ending a testing requiremen­t for unvaccinat­ed school workers. After lifting the statewide school mask mandate in February 2022, and lifting vaccine requiremen­ts on college campuses, Pritzker called it the latest part of his plan to “carefully unwind the state’s COVID-19 executive orders.”

 ?? PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES ?? Gov. J.B. Pritzker urges Illinoisan­s “to get vaccinated or get their booster shots.”
PAT NABONG/SUN-TIMES Gov. J.B. Pritzker urges Illinoisan­s “to get vaccinated or get their booster shots.”

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