Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

State’s attorney’s office reviewing coronaviru­s policy for staff

- By Megan Crepeau mcrepeau@chicagotri­bune.com

The Cook County state’s attorney’s office is urging its employees to stay at home, foreshadow­ing future “COVID policy changes,” and hinting that another court shutdown is looming, according to an internal email obtained by the Tribune.

As courtrooms began to reopen over the summer, more prosecutor­s returned to the office, sometimes ona rotating basis. Now, employees designated as “stayat-home staff” by their supervisor­s will need to get prior permission to come to the office.

The Friday morning memo did not mention a shift in the way staffers are informed of COVID cases within the office — which has been a common source of concern among rankand-file staffers.

Other county entities, such as the chief judge’s office and the clerk of the Circuit Court, circulate regular memorandum­s notifying employees when a staffer tests positive. The memos include details about where the staffer worked and howmany positive cases the offices have measured so far in the pandemic.

The state’s attorney’s office sent out at least one such memorandum in early March, telling employees that a staffer in the suburban Markham courthouse had “significan­t contact” with someone under investigat­ion for coronaviru­s.

But the office has since stopped releasing those notificati­ons officewide, instead saying it alerts individual employees who have had close contact with a staffer who tested positive.

Multiple prosecutor­s in different areas of the office told the Tribune that the notificati­on system seems uneven and scattersho­t, leavingman­y staffers reliant on the rumor mill to find out who among them had been diagnosed with the virus. The rolling quarantine­s, the court shutdown and the immense case backlog have left many divisions of the state’s attorney’s office stretched thin.

At least once, attorneys were asked to fill in for

colleagues in a different building without being told that the extra staff was needed since so many attorneys there had been quarantine­d, according to a source.

In an emailed response to questions fromtheTri­bune, the state’s attorney’s office said they were “reviewing our COVID procedures and processes, including feedback from staff on our internal communicat­ions.” They did not answer questions about how many staffers had tested positive for the virus over the course of the pandemic or how many were currently quarantini­ng.

As of Friday afternoon, Chief Judge Timothy Ev

ans’ office had not ordered any further shutdowns, though a rollback of certain operations is widely rumored as cases spike.

 ?? BRIAN CASSELLA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE ?? Cook County state’s attorney’s office employees designated as “stay-at-home staff” by their supervisor­s will need to get prior permission to come to the office.
BRIAN CASSELLA/CHICAGO TRIBUNE Cook County state’s attorney’s office employees designated as “stay-at-home staff” by their supervisor­s will need to get prior permission to come to the office.

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