Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Board passes sharing of patients’ addresses with first responders

- By Alice Yin ayin@chicagotri­bune.com

County Board members narrowly approved a resolution Thursday to share addresses of COVID-19 patients with first responders, following an emotional debate about the measure’s intention to safeguard front-line workers versus fears it would violate individual­s’ privacy and civil rights.

Commission­ers voted 9-7 with one member abstaining from the resolution, which would direct the Cook County Department of Public Health to disclose locations of those testing positive for the coronaviru­s with 911 dispatcher­s in suburban Cook County every day for two months.

While the measure by Commission­er Scott Britton, D-Glenview, is only a recommenda­tion, department of public health spokesman Kim Junius said the Cook County Department of Public Health will follow the address-sharing practice because of the board’s instructio­ns. That’s in spite of public health co-administra­tor Rachel Rubin’s warning before the vote that the practice was inadequate and dangerous for both citizens and first responders.

County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e agreed with Rubin, saying it’s guaranteed the address-sharing plan would contribute to the systemic racism that black and Latino communitie­s suffer.

“I’m profoundly disappoint­ed,” Preckwinkl­e said after the measure passed.

Earlier in the meeting, Preckwinkl­e warned, “I don’t see how anyone who understand­s the endemic nature of racism in this country, and the discrimina­tion that black and brown people have experience­d, will assume that this resolution is somehow going to be immune from that discrimina­tion.”

While commission­ers in favor of the resolution acknowledg­ed the longstandi­ng mistrust between black and brown communitie­s and law enforcemen­t, they said the dearth of personal protective equipment has backed them into a wall when it comes to thinking up solutions to protect first responders.

Britton invoked the killing of Ahmaud Arbery, the black jogger who was shot to death by two white men in Georgia, as a nod to his understand­ing of the racism that people of color face every day. But he said the limits of the resolution, which expires in 60 days and only shares addresses, not names, will ensure there will be no government overreach.

“We all know from the incident that happened in Georgia that you can be hunted down by two racists in a pickup truck and murdered, and no one does anything for two months,” Britton said. “Can I tell you that there’s never a risk of overreach by the government or failure to act? Of course not. But I can tell you because of the limits of this resolution, that is not going to happen here.”

Britton held up a picture of a Niles Fire Department responder during his comment to highlight the extent of PPE required to respond to a place exposed to the new coronaviru­s. A man stood with gloves, a full-face shield and a silver body gown covering his entire body. Much of the PPE is not recyclable, Britton said.

“All I’m trying to do is to try to give a little more informatio­n to those first responders, the people who enter the burning buildings, the people who respond to the active shooters, to give them some more informatio­n so they can protect themselves a little bit more,” Britton said.

But Rubin said the resolution could backfire, as there are scores of residents who may have not sought testing because they are asymptomat­ic. Every individual that law enforcemen­t comes into contact with should be treated as a COVID-19-positive case, Rubin said. Her position was supported by the Illinois Department of Public Health.

“This is not good public health practice,” Rubin said. “Pushing out addresses to first responders does not help to maintain the safety of the first responders or of the individual­s that they’re trying to respond to for aid.”

The measure comes after a legal challenge to instate address-sharing was shot down. Earlier this month, a northwest suburban 911 dispatch system failed in its bid to force Cook County to share addresses of coronaviru­s patients on Friday after a judge denied its temporary restrainin­g order, sharing similar concerns as Preckwinkl­e and Rubin. But the judge did grant the village of Lincolnwoo­d’s motion to intervene and set another hearing for early June.

Illinois Attorney General Kwame Raoul had advised that address-sharing is permissibl­e due to a Health Insurance Portabilit­y and Accountabi­lity Act (HIPAA) exception, but he did not go so far as to recommend the practice.

Much of the Thursday board meeting’s public comment section was centered around Britton’s resolution, with suburban villages, police department­s and fire department­s urging the need for address-sharing amid PPE shortages, and dozens of individual­s and civil rights groups, including the Illinois chapter of the American Civil Liberties Union, saying it would lead to harm.

“Police Officers respond to assignment­s ‘on the fly’, and based upon the nature of the assignment, often times DO NOT have adequate time to don PPE before entering a scene,” Des Plaines police Chief William Kushner wrote. “Unnecessar­y delays (to don PPE) can mean the difference between life and death for innocent victims, and the officers themselves. Withholdin­g address informatio­n of COVID-19 positive persons from first responders borders on criminal negligence.”

Chris Wade, a Peoria resident, implored the board to vote “no” out of fear it would worsen existing racial disparitie­s amid the panCook demic. In Chicago, black and Latino residents are disproport­ionately dying from the coronaviru­s.

“I am a black male living in society today who knows first hand about disease policing and criminaliz­ation,” Wade wrote. “We have seen the deadly effects of first responders acting out of fear — especially in Black communitie­s. Passing this Resolution invites a new metric of fear and will augment the harm that Black and Latinx communitie­s experience.”

Preckwinkl­e and commission­ers also took the opportunit­y to censure President Donald Trump’s administra­tion for what they described as a failure to deliver enough PPE for first responders that they said led them to the controvers­ial address-sharing proposal.

“Until the federal government sends proper protective equipment and stops standing in the way of progress, we are at a wit’s end with our hands being tied with being able to provide the protection to first-line workers,” Commission­er Stanley Moore, D-Chicago, said.

Commission­ers Frank Aguilar, Alma Anaya, Dennis Deer, Bridget Degnen, Bridget Gainer, Brandon Johnson and Kevin Morrison voted against the COVID-19 address-sharing resolution, while commission­er Bill Lowry voted present.

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 ?? JOSE M. OSORIO/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? “I’m profoundly disappoint­ed,” Cook County Board President Preckwinkl­e said after a measure passes to share addresses of COVID-19 patients with first responders.
JOSE M. OSORIO/CHICAGO TRIBUNE “I’m profoundly disappoint­ed,” Cook County Board President Preckwinkl­e said after a measure passes to share addresses of COVID-19 patients with first responders.

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