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Chicago COVID mandate: Mayor Lori Lightfoot announces new proof of COVID-19 vaccine, testing requirements for indoor venues

CHICAGO (WLS) — The city of Chicago is imposing a wide-ranging vaccine mandate that will affect bars, restaurants, gyms and more after the first of the year.

Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced the new requirements Tuesday in response to the surge in COVID cases.

“Chances are everyone knows someone with COVID-19 right now,” Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady said. “It’s everywhere.”

This new mandate applies to anyone 5 and older who is eligible to get vaccinated. It will take effect Jan. 3, and is likely to remain in effect for several months.

WATCH: Mayor Lightfoot announces new vaccine proof requirement for Chicago

That means going out to eat in Chicago will soon require people to bring not just their mask, but also proof of vaccination if they are going to be inside for more than 10 minutes.

“This new wave is seemingly more deadly than the last, spreading faster and causing profound harm,” Lightfoot said. “To be clear, I’ve not been this concerned about COVID-19 since the early days of the pandemic.”

SEE ALSO: Biden to announce plan to mail 500M free rapid tests to Americans next month

City data show that, on average, more than 2,000 Chicagoans are testing positive for the virus daily.

The mayor’s requirement only applies to bars, restaurants, gyms and entertainment venues that serve food and drink; it does not include houses of worship or grocery stores.

Proof of vaccination will be required at:

  • Restaurants and bars
  • Entertainment venues where food and beverages are served
  • Sports arenas, concert venues, bowling alleys and movie theaters
  • Indoor fitness centers
  • “These are the places that are the most risky places for spread, which is why we’re focused on them,” Lightfoot said. “This order will remain in effect until the city deems that the threat of COVID-19 to public health as diminished significantly.”

    Right now, most large venues already ask for proof of vaccination, but many restaurants do not.

    For some patrons, it’s welcome news.

    “I think it’ll make people feel safe. It makes me feel safer. So I would think there are a lot of like-minded people out there like me,” said Larry Knight.

    RELATED: Chicago travel update: 5 states added; advisory stands at 47 states, 2 territories

    “I know my employees have a lesser likelihood of getting sick if they’re waiting on guests or around guests who are vaccinated,” said Scott Weiner, the Fifty/50 Restaurant Group owner.

    Weiner was one of the first restaurant group owners to require staff to get vaccinated, and supports Lightfoot’s requirement for restaurants and bars to require proof of vaccination for customers

    “I don’t think it’s going to be that tough; this is no different than checking an ID for someone who wants a beer,” he said.

    Employees at the impacted establishments who are not fully vaccinated will have the option to be tested for COVID on a weekly basis.

    The order does not go into effect until Jan. 3 to give businesses time to adapt and train workers, but there will be enforcement and possible fines.

    One restaurant owner said they are not against a vaccine passport, but it just adds another requirement for workers, which he called a “heavy lift.”

    However, it’s been a pretty straightforward process at Replay in Andersonville.

    “We have door people at the bar locations, they just check IDs as they check vaccine cards. It’s been a non-issue,” said Replay owner Mark Liberson.

    Liberson has been requiring proof of vaccination at Replay and his four other bars since June. While he has lost some business, Liberson said most of customers have supported the requirement and said a citywide mandate for bars and restaurants will make it easier to operate.

    “I think what this is going to do is really going to communicate a consistent standard, so we won’t be the only ones,” Liberson said.

    “Establishments will be required to one, post signage at each publicly accessible entrance and at least one location inside informing patrons of the vaccination requirements,” said Ken Meyer with CMSR business and consumer protection.

    They will also have to provide proof of how they plan to implement the requirement. There’s a planned webinar to help businesses.

    While the “get tested” or “show proof of vaccination” requirement may indeed make more people feel comfortable going out to eat, one restaurant owner is concerned that it could also have the opposite effect and further hurt their business.

    “It is frightening thinking about how can this affect our business and even more than it already has, so it’s a little bit frightening. But on the other end of that as just a civilian of Chicago, right, it is comforting because with the omicron cases sweeping through the United States now, I think it gives people a sense of security that when you’re dining out you will be a little bit safer,” said Niki Flores of Chicago’s Pizza.

    Justin Jacobson, a business owner with Platinum Sanitation, agrees.

    “To start putting limitations on businesses that are already struggling, there’s enough problems going on out here that we have to worry about, rather than going into one of these restaurants,” Jacobson said.

    One Chicago woman who asked not to be identified said Wednesday could be her last time bringing her 5-year-old twin daughters out to eat in the city.

    “I’m not going to get my kids vaccinated because I feel like they are too young, and it made me sick the second dose so I don’t want them to go through what I went through,” she said. ‘They are trying to force everyone to get the vaccination by going through the kids.”

    The Fifty/50 Restaurant Group said they are prepared for some pushback from customers.

    “I think it might drive unvaccinated customers away, and I’m OK with that,” Weiner added.

    Wiener is convinced having everyone vaccinated at his restaurants will end up being good for business.

    The Illinois Restaurant Associated released a statement following the announcement that said, “Chicago’s hospitality community is in a very fragile stage of recovery. Throughout the pandemic, the industry has prioritized customer and team member safety above all else, and the IRA strongly supports vaccinations for everyone to mitigate the spread of COVID-19. We encourage all diners to please lend their cooperation, respect and kindness to the employees working to comply with the new mandate during these challenging times.”

    This new mitigation effort is aimed at stemming the spread of the omicron variant, which the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention now says is responsible for 73% of all new COVID cases.

    The announcement comes as Illinois reported the largest single-day increase of the year Monday, with 12,328 new cases. Health officials also said 60% of the state’s population is now fully vaccinated, as of Tuesday.

    The recent surge comes just as large family gatherings and crowded airports could send numbers even higher.

    Right now, there are nearly 4,000 patients with COVID in Illinois. More than 800 of those patients are in ICU beds, which worries some health care workers at Silver Cross Hospital in southwest suburban New Lenox.

    “We are nearing our capacity but we do have contingency plans in place to add ICU beds if needed,” said Dr. Atul Gupta, medical director with infection prevention at Silver Cross Hospital. “We’re hoping not to get to that point.”

    In Chicago and suburban Cook County, availability is better. Across Will and Kankakee counties, only 5% of ICU beds are available.

    Test positivity rate in Illinois is now at 7.1%.

    Indoor mask mandates will remain in place for the immediate future, or at least until the surge is over.

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    Chicago vaccine mandate: City workers will need to get COVID-19 shot, Mayor Lori Lightfoot says

    CHICAGO (WLS) — Chicago will mandate city workers get a COVID-19 vaccination, Mayor Lori Lightfoot announced Monday.

    “City employees are absolutely going to be required to be vaccinated,” Lightfoot said during a press conference Monday afternoon.

    The announcement came hours after the FDA announced the Pfizer COVID-19 vaccine had been granted full approval in the United States.

    SEE ALSO | Chicago COVID vaccine map shows how many residents vaccinated by zip code

    Lightfoot added that the city has been working with labor unions over the last several weeks to finalize plans. A formal announcement is expected as early as this week.

    “We absolutely have to have a vaccine mandate,” Lightfoot added. “It’s for the safety of all involved, particularly members of the public who are interacting with city employees on a daily basis. It’s important for colleagues to also feel like they have a workplace that’s safe.”

    More companies and hospitals are moving ahead with vaccine mandates with the number of COVID cases on the rise particularly with the more contagious delta variant. But already, some unions are digging in their heels.

    “We are not just going to roll over and play dead for the mayor,” said John Catanzara Jr., president of Chicago’s Fraternal Order of Police. “She’s not going to force it down our throats without a fight. And we will take it to the courts if necessary.”

    Catanzara said the four police unions will be meeting with City Hall Tuesday afternoon to discuss the mandate. The Fraternal Order of Police said this was not part of the recently negotiated contract for the rank and file.

    “And we thought we had an understanding that we were perfectly fine with the option for our members to decide for themselves without it being a mandate,” Catanzara added.

    Lightfoot’s office said the announcement would be made in the days ahead, but would not provide any details of the plan, or whether it would cover all or only certain city workers.

    Copyright © 2021 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.



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    Illinois mask mandate: Gov. Pritzker announces school mask requirement, vaccine requirement for some state workers

    CHICAGO (WLS) — Gov. JB Pritzker announced a statewide school mask mandate Wednesday afternoon as the delta variant spreads in Illinois. It will apply to all K-12 schools and daycares, both public and private.

    Pritzker made the announcement after watching key COVID indicators going up – and after seeing so many school districts across the state deciding to make masking optional.

    “Far too few school districts have chosen to follow the federal Centers for Disease Control’s prescriptions for keeping students and staff safe, though I want to commend the districts in Edwardsville, Champaign, Peoria, Springfield, Elgin, Chicago and others for already doing the right thing for their students,” Pritzker said. “Given the CDC’s strong recommendation, I had hoped that a statewide school mask requirement wouldn’t be necessary, but it is.”

    WATCH | Gov. Pritzker announces school mask mandate

    The decision is being praised by school mask advocates, and criticized by those favoring choice.

    “I think he didn’t want to take the responsibility and accountability for this to begin with, because he didn’t want the blowback,” said Ronak Maisuria, a parent in Wheaton Warrenville District 200. “I give him credit for finally issuing a mandate, but he should have done it from the beginning.”

    “My position is, it’s the parents’ choice,” said Meredith Darbyshire, the parent of two children in Glen Ellyn District 89. “And I believe that it should be optional, and it should be left up to the parents to make that decision for their family and what is best for their children.”

    Pritzker also announced that effective Oct. 4, vaccines will be mandated for state employees who work in in congregate settings, including veterans’ homes, long-term care facilities, correctional facilities, developmental centers and psychiatric hospitals.

    “They run the risk of carrying the virus in to work with them, then it’s the residents who end up seriously sick or hospitalized or worse,” Pritzker said. “It’s a breach of safety, it’s fundamentally wrong and in Illinois it’s going to stop.”

    Republican leaders criticized the mandate, saying the decision should be left up to local officials and parents. They also criticized him for not including lawmakers in the action.

    After a year and a half of COVID-related disruptions, there are many things Ariel Shorter, 17, is looking forward to going into her senior year at Gwendolyn Brooks College Prep. But wearing a mask while in class is not one of them.

    “They have forced us to wear masks which puts us in an awkward situation. It makes us uncomfortable,” Shorter said. “I actually told my principal if we had to wear masks I would rather stay at home because I’d rather be comfortable while learning.”

    Reaction to the governor’s mask mandate has been swift and mixed. A former science teacher, Jurema Gorham, made the decision to homeschool her 9-year-old son last year. She’s now moved him out of CPS and into Hyde Park’s St. Thomas the Apostle Grade School. Chicago’s Catholic Schools were not going to require masks for vaccinated students and staff, until now.

    “I do believe it needs to be done, especially when you don’t know where everyone coming into one space is coming from,” Gorham said.

    And while CPS had already announced that masks would be required in the fall, debate on both sides of the school masking issue has been raging in the suburbs. A meeting of Villa Park’s School District 45 got contentious Tuesday night, with many of those in attendance refusing to wear masks.

    “It’s horrific our children that they are injuring their own children with having to wear a mask,” attendee Bradley Donald said. “But even more horrific, you want to harm someone else’s child to have them have a mask on.”

    A lobbyist for public school families statewide, Cassie Cresswell said she for one is glad the decision has been taken out of the hands of individual school districts.

    “They are not epidemiologists, they are not immunologists. That’s not an area of expertise you should expect your school administration to have,” Cresswell said.

    Both the Illinois Federation of Teachers and the Chicago Teachers Union today expressed their support for the governor’s mandate.

    COVID vaccine Chicago: Business lead charge in requiring masks, shots

    It used to be “no shirt, no shoes, no service,” but, with cases of COVID rising, some businesses are now saying “no shot, no service.”

    Metro Chicago, a concert hall in Wrigleyville, just announced that anyone attending shows there will be required to show proof of vaccination, unlike Lollapalooza, which allowed unvaccinated people to enter by providing a current negative COVID test.

    Metro also said patrons will be required to show a government-issued photo ID, and it’s recommended that everyone wear masks.

    If you want to dine in restaurants and bars in NorthHalsted like D.S. Tequila Co. and Sidetrack, you better have proof of COVID vaccination, as it’s now required to get in.

    More and more restaurants and nightclubs around the Chicago area are making that move as COVID cases once again surge, driven by the spread of the delta variant, especially in unvaccinated populations.

    RELATED: Some Chicago restaurants requiring masks, COVID vaccinations as cases increase

    The move to require masks and ask for vaccination status is supported by Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady, even as she insisted the city has no plans yet to follow New York’s move to mandate proof of vaccination for all indoor dining and fitness centers.

    “I want to thank them for doing that. It is clearly one of the most important things they can do for reducing the risk for everybody in the restaurant,” Arwady said.

    The city is working on a way for people to digitally prove their vaccination status.

    “We have a lot of people who lose their cards,” Arwady explained. “We want people where there are settings that are wanting to either mandate vaccines or be checking vaccines as folks are coming in. I want to make that as technologically easy as possible in a way that protects everybody’s privacy.”

    The Illinois Restaurant Association hopes individual restaurants will be allowed to make their own decisions, and pointed out that restaurants operating at high capacity or that are in neighborhoods with lower vaccination rates would be catastrophically affected by a vaccine mandate.

    “We’re still behind,” said Sam Sanchez. “Every time you open the door and you’re not operating at 100%, you’re losing money.”

    Businesses see vaccine mandates as way to protect staff

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    Chicago vaccine mandate: Gov. Pritzker to announce statewide school mask requirement, following some businesses, sources say

    CHICAGO (WLS) — Gov. JB Pritzker is expected to announce a statewide school mask mandate Wednesday afternoon, as some Chicago businesses take vaccine and mask requirements into their own hands, sources say.

    Pritzker’s decision is because of the rising number of cases of the delta variant, with a number of kids getting it, and all the “noise” about it, according to sources.

    The differing approaches school districts are taking is also a factor, sources said.

    It will apply to all public and private schools, K-12.

    Illinois Department of Public Health Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike will be joining the governor at 2:30 p.m. at the Thompson Center.

    Rebecca Fortner has two children in Villa Park’s School District 45. She said she’s relieved the governor is planning to mandate masks for all K through 12 students in the state.

    “I wish he had done it sooner. I think a lot of us wished for that. I do worry about the enforcement of it,” she said.

    Tuesday night in Villa Park there were heated words and tense moments.

    The District 45 school board threatened to adjourn early after some in the audience refused to comply with the meeting’s mask requirement.

    “It’s horrific that they’re injuring their own children with having to wear a mask. But even more horrific, you want to harm someone else’s child to have them have a mask on. That’s shame on you. Shame on you for doing that,” District 45 parent Bradley Donald said.

    After a 45-minute delay, the meeting continued without mask enforcement. Later, there was an altercation in the hallway. One person was led away after appearing to suffer a panic attack.

    Parent Tracey Gzamouranis worries it’s a sign of what’s to come when kids go back to school.

    “Parents are gonna drop them off with no masks and tell them not to wear them and what did they see last night? They saw that it wasn’t enforced,” Gzamouranis said. “It’s a good thing. It needed to come from the top. It hadn’t. I’m glad it has now, but it almost seems as it’s a little late in our case. If it had been announced before last night, maybe all of it could have been avoided last night.

    COVID vaccine Chicago: Business lead charge in requiring masks, shots

    It used to be “no shirt, no shoes, no service,” but, with cases of COVID rising, some businesses are now saying “no shot, no service.”

    Metro Chicago, a concert hall in Wrigleyville, just announced that anyone attending shows there will be required to show proof of vaccination, unlike Lollapalooza, which allowed unvaccinated people to enter by providing a current negative COVID test.

    Metro also said patrons will be required to show a government-issued photo ID, and it’s recommended that everyone wear masks.

    If you want to dine in restaurants and bars in NorthHalsted like D.S. Tequila Co. and Sidetrack, you better have proof of COVID vaccination, as it’s now required to get in.

    More and more restaurants and nightclubs around the Chicago area are making that move as COVID cases once again surge, driven by the spread of the delta variant, especially in unvaccinated populations.

    RELATED: Some Chicago restaurants requiring masks, COVID vaccinations as cases increase

    The move to require masks and ask for vaccination status is supported by Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady, even as she insisted the city has no plans yet to follow New York’s move to mandate proof of vaccination for all indoor dining and fitness centers.

    “I want to thank them for doing that. It is clearly one of the most important things they can do for reducing the risk for everybody in the restaurant,” Arwady said.

    The city is working on a way for people to digitally prove their vaccination status.

    “We have a lot of people who lose their cards,” Arwady explained. “We want people where there are settings that are wanting to either mandate vaccines or be checking vaccines as folks are coming in. I want to make that as technologically easy as possible in a way that protects everybody’s privacy.”

    The Illinois Restaurant Association hopes individual restaurants will be allowed to make their own decisions, and pointed out that restaurants operating at high capacity or that are in neighborhoods with lower vaccination rates would be catastrophically affected by a vaccine mandate.

    “We’re still behind,” said Sam Sanchez. “Every time you open the door and you’re not operating at 100%, you’re losing money.”

    Businesses see vaccine mandates as way to protect staff

    Copyright © 2021 WLS-TV. All Rights Reserved.



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