Tag Archives: Cook County

New poll shows Vallas, Garcia as frontrunners

A new voter opinion survey finds Paul Vallas and Rep. Chuy Garcia leading the nine-candidate field for mayor of Chicago.  

The top two finishers in next month’s voting will compete in an April 4th runoff election.

And, despite spending several million dollars on campaign advertising in recent weeks, incumbent Lori Lightfoot has fallen to fourth place, behind teachers union staffer Brandon Johnson.

Pollster Matt Podgorski, of the political consulting firm M3, said, “The big takeaway that we saw is that Chuy Garcia and Paul Vallas basically flip-flopped spots. Now I’ve got Paul Vallas in first place with 26% and Chuy Garcia in second with 19%.”

Garcia’s been the target of a negative attack ad aired by Lightfoot this month. 

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The West Side congressman has not yet begun airing TV commercials of his own. A leader of Garcia’s campaign told FOX 32 Chicago News that once Garcia goes up on the air, he plans to stay up through Feb. 28, the day first-round votes will be counted by the Chicago Board of Election Commissioners.

Johnson, whose campaign relies heavily on cash from the teachers union, appears to have benefited from an aggressive schedule of paid media. He surged from just 3.2% in M3’s December survey to 12.2% this week. 

Mayor Lightfoot’s campaign spending did not stem a decline in support found by the survey. She fell from 14.5% in December to single digit territory this week: 9.8%.

Multi-millionaire businessman Willie Wilson also lost ground in the M3 poll. Wilson had 13.1% in December; 8.5% this week.

The M3 survey was conducted Jan. 15-17, prior to Thursday night’s mayoral debate. A total of 531 likely voters participated, including 49 who completed a Spanish-language version of the questions. It is accurate to within plus or minus 4.25 percentage points.

A spokesperson from Lightfoot’s campaign attacked the survey calling the race “complicated.” 

The Vallas campaign says the poll proves what they already knew. 

“Paul’s message of putting crime and Chicago’s safety first is clearly resonating with the voters and our campaign has the financial resources and support necessary to continue driving that message home over the next six weeks,” said Vallas campaign chief strategist Joe Trippi.

Mayoral candidate Brandon Johnson released a statement, saying: “The people of Chicago are ready for new leadership and we’re proving there is a better way forward…The city has turned the page on Mayor Lightfoot and business-as-usual politics. It’s time to move Chicago forward and usher in a new dawn of people-first policies.”

Candidate Willie Wilson also released a statement, calling the poll “garbage.”

The M3 pollster defended the integrity of the results based on how the likely voters were selected. 

“All likely voters in the city of Chicago, had an equal chance of being contacted. The response group was carefully balanced by race, region, gender, age, language, and even how they voted in 2020 for President,” Podgorski said.

Political Editor Mike Flannery’s Analysis

With Paul Vallas in first and Chuy Garcia second, they would currently be most likely to compete in the two-person, April 4th runoff election.

“The big takeaway we saw was that Chuy Garcia and Paul Vallas basically flip-flopped spots,” Podgorski said.

In a survey done earlier this week before Thursday night’s debate, Vallas had 26%, Congressman Garcia 19%, veteran teachers union staffer Brandon Johnson 12.2%, with Mayor Lightfoot falling to 9.8% in fourth place.

While the mayor’s negative attack ad may have contributed to Garcia’s loss of nearly nine percentage points since last month, it apparently hasn’t helped her. Lightfoot’s lost nearly five percentage points since last month’s M3 survey.

“We now see Brandon Johnson surging in in third place with 12%, while stunningly the incumbent Mayor Lori Lightfoot has dropped all the way down to fourth place,” Podgorski said. “In fact, in the survey, we specifically asked have you seen, read or heard any information about the candidate recently and those that said ‘yes,’ she was underwater by 30% in terms of how that influenced their opinion of her.”

Lightfoot may have been damaged by last week’s revelation that her campaign made inappropriate attempts to recruit students and faculty in both the public schools and city colleges.

Vallas celebrated these results, pushing them out to supporters in an email. Mayor Lightfoot, not so much. A spokeswoman called the poll deeply flawed — a claim rejected by Podgorski.

Fox 32 Chicago will host a Mayoral Forum on Thursday, Feb. 9.

Full details on the survey can be found in the PDF below:

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Illinois COVID Update Today: IL reports 7,709 new cases, 7 deaths; CDPH recommends masks in public indoor spaces

CHICAGO (WLS) — Illinois reported 7,709 new COVID cases and 7 deaths Friday as the CDC said 9 Chicago-area counties have reached a “medium” risk of transmission.

There have been at least 3,169,315 total COVID cases as of Friday, including at least 33,660 related deaths in the state since the pandemic began.

As of Thursday night, 808 patients in Illinois were reported to be in the hospital with COVID-19. Of those, 66 patients were in the ICU, and 24 patients with COVID-19 were on ventilators.

A total of 22,018,536 vaccine doses have been administered in Illinois as of Thursday, and 64.76% of the state’s population is fully vaccinated. The seven-day rolling average of vaccines administered daily is 14,163.

Ahead of a busy weekend of Mother’s Day celebrations, officials are urging people to mask up and avoid gatherings altogether if you have any symptoms at all.

Chicago and several suburban counties are now at a “medium” community level, defined by the CDC as having more than 200 new cases per 100,000 people in the past seven days.

“There unfortunately is a misconception that we’re out of this, and so I think people are not as cautious as they were before,” said Dr. Susan Bleasdale, director for infection prevention at UI Health.

Chicago city officials are now strongly recommending masks be worn in indoor public spaces, including on CTA and in CPS schools.

“Everyone should be wearing a mask,” said Dr. Emily Landon, director of infection prevention at UChicago Medicine. “If you’ve got an event coming up that you don’t want to be sick for, a vacation that you don’t want to miss because you’re home with COVID, you need to be wearing a mask all the time.”

For now, it’s still a recommendation and not a requirement. But if hospitalizations continue to climb, that could be on the horizon.

The move to medium level comes ahead of busy Mother’s Day weekend for many with families planning get togethers. Doctors caution rapid tests may not detect COVID if your symptoms are mild.

“You want to be really careful,” Bleasdale said. “If you’re visiting your mother, and there’s someone that is vulnerable, if you’re going to visit them, you may choose to wear a mask the entire time you visit together.”

CDPH also said Chicagoans should also ensure that they and everyone in their social network is up-to-date with COVID-19 vaccines and boosters, test in the setting of any potential COVID-19 symptoms and continue to follow all isolation and quarantine requirements.

Still, CDPH Commissioner Allison Arwady said Chicago moving into the “medium” level does not mean a citywide mask mandate, restrictions on public gatherings or reinstatement of vaccination requirements at this time. Arwady said CDPH would consider those measures if the city moved into the “high” community level, “which we aren’t close to reaching in Chicago right now.”

“We obviously don’t want to get there, and exercising some more caution now will help us keep COVID in control in Chicago,” Arwady said.

She added that moving into the “medium” level is not cause for alarm.

“We’ve been expecting to reach the Medium Level for some time now,” said CDPH Commissioner Allison Arwady. “It’s not a cause for alarm, since most cases right now are mild and thankfully our COVID-19 hospitalizations and deaths remain at or near all-time pandemic lows in Chicago. But it is reason for more caution, and for more care with masking, since more people in Chicago are infected with COVID right now. Remember that people can spread COVID for two days before they develop symptoms, so putting on a mask in public indoor settings is an easy way to help protect our city while we’re at a Medium COVID Level.”

Cook, Lake, McHenry, Kane, DuPage, Will, DeKalb, Kendall and Winnebago counties have “medium” COVID risk levels, according to the CDC.

“You know, especially that 0 to 19 group, they’re reporting the most cases every day,” said Chris Hoff, with DuPage County Health Dept. “But we are seeing increases in every age group across the community.”

Cook County has a weekly COVID case rate of 259.31 infections per 100,000 people.

Lake County has a weekly COVID case rate of 331.64 infections per 100,000 people.

McHenry County has a weekly COVID case rate of 254.41 infections per 100,000 people.

Kane County has a weekly COVID case rate of 248.68 infections per 100,000 people.

DuPage County has a weekly COVID case rate of 365.69 infections per 100,000 people.

Will County has a weekly COVID case rate of 239.6 infections per 100,000 people.

DeKalb County has a weekly COVID case rate of 275.51 infections per 100,000 people.

Kendall County has a weekly COVID case rate of 251.96 infections per 100,000 people.

Winnebago County has a weekly COVID case rate of 218.35 infections per 100,000 people.

The video in the player above is from a previous report.

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Chicago Recommends All Residents Wear Masks Indoors, Regardless of Vaccination Status – NBC Chicago

Chicago health officials now recommend all residents over the age of 2 wear masks in public indoor settings, regardless of vaccination status, the department announced Friday.

The Chicago Department of Public Health noted that wearing a face covering remains optional in outdoor settings “where the risk of COVID-19 transmission is lower.”

“We are taking this step to prevent further spread of the very contagious Delta variant and to protect public health,” said CDPH Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady. “This isn’t forever, but it is necessary to help decrease the risk for all Chicagoans right now.”

CDPH recommended businesses, employers and event organizers require masking in all indoor public settings, as well. Face coverings remain optional in outdoor settings, but the recommendation to social distance remains.

Chicago Public Schools announced a similar masking policy for all teachers, staff, students and visitors, asking that face coverings be worn while inside academic buildings.

Along with suburban Cook County, Chicago is considered an area of “substantial” COVID transmission by the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, a move that triggered federal recommendation to resume indoor masking under its new guidance released Tuesday.

The CDC updated its guidance to recommend that fully vaccinated people should wear masks in indoor settings again in areas of the U.S. that are seeing “substantial” or “high” transmission of COVID-19. Illinois’ health department later said it would align with the CDC guidance.

Cook County is now seeing “substantial” community transmission of COVID-19, per data federal health officials updated on Thursday, meaning fully vaccinated people should resume wearing masks indoors under new guidance released earlier this week.

Cook County also updated its guidance on masking and other COVID-19 precautions Friday, recommending everyone wear masks indoors, regardless of vaccination status.

In alignment with the CDC, CCDPH said it “strongly recommends” the following: 

  • Individuals over 2 years of age should wear a mask in public indoor settings, regardless of vaccination status. 
  • Fully-vaccinated people who have been exposed to someone who has suspected or confirmed COVID should be tested 3-5 days following the exposure and wear a mask indoors as above · Fully-vaccinated people may wish to mask outdoor in crowded settings. CCDPH fully endorses this action. 
  • Guidance has not changed for unvaccinated individuals: masks should be worn indoors and in crowded outdoor settings, regardless of the community transmission level. 

CCDPH said it also continues to recommend its previous guidance that all people in school settings – teachers, staff, students, and visitors – should wear masks indoors regardless of vaccination status and community transmission level.

The department is also encouraging people to mask indoors or in crowded outdoor settings regardless of community transmission.

Masks are still required for everyone older than 2 on public transportation or at any indoor transportation hub, as well as in health care and long-term care settings, CCDPH said.

“You might choose to wear a mask regardless of the level of transmission if you have a weakened immune system or if, because of your age or an underlying medical condition, you are at increased risk for severe disease, or if a member of your household has a weakened immune system, is at increased risk for severe disease, or is unvaccinated,” CCDPH added.

The updated guidance came one day after the CDC placed Cook County in the category of seeing “substantial” community transmission of COVID-19. Other Chicago-area counties in that same category include: Will, DuPage, Kendall, McHenry, Boone, Winnebago, DeKalb, LaSalle and Grundy.

You can find the map of each county in the U.S. and its transmission level here

The CDC updated its guidance Tuesday to recommend that fully vaccinated people should wear masks in indoor settings again in areas of the U.S. that are seeing “substantial” or “high” transmission of COVID-19.

The agency uses two measures to group U.S. counties into the four levels of community transmission: the number of new cases per 100,000 residents and the percent of COVID-19 tests that are positive over the past week.

If a county has reported 50 to 100 cases per 100,000 residents over a seven-day period or has a positivity rate of 8% to 10%, it falls into the “substantial transmission” tier, while those reporting 100 cases or more per 100,000 or have a positivity rate of at least 10% are labeled as “high transmission.” Those are the two groups for which the CDC recommends mask-wearing.

The new guidance marked a reversal from earlier recommendations that said fully vaccinated people could remove masks in most settings.

Many of Illinois’ counties fall into either “substantial,” labeled in orange, or “high” transmission, labeled in red. Some counties – mostly concentrated in the northern and central regions of the state – are seeing “moderate” transmission, labeled in yellow, while just two are colored blue for “low” transmission, with indoor masking recommendations not applying to those two categories.

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Chicago COVID: Restrictions may return in suburban Cook County if coronavirus cases continue to rise, health officials say

CHICAGO (WLS) — Suburban Cook County may be on the brink of having new restrictions imposed after health officials reported a sharp increase in COVID-19 case numbers.

The Illinois Department of Public Health reported more than 2,800 new confirmed and probably cases of COVID-19 with hundreds of those in Cook County.

There are fears numbers of cases will be higher after Easter. County leaders warn that if this upward trend does not change, new restrictions could be coming.

Officials are working to figure out what is causing this spike while threatening the possibility of returning restrictions. Cook County Health said that could mean clamping down on indoor activities like going to restaurants and fitness clubs. Meanwhile, officials are asking people to stay outdoors with gatherings, masked up and socially distant as much as possible.

“We’ve seen over 600 new cases in suburban Cook in our jurisdiction alone,” said Dr. Rachel Rubin. “And so that means that we are in the beginnings of another surge.”

Now, county health officials said the uptick in cases could translate to new restrictions imposed if those numbers do not go down.

Cook County Health said the county is on the cusp of another surge. Recent data showed noticeable increases in new cases among people their 20s and 30s, and the positivity rate nearly doubled from the past weeks.

According to recent data, the most significant rise in cases is among the 20s and 30 age group, and the positivity rate nearly doubled from weeks past.

“Our overall positivity rate, I think, is now maybe about five, we were down to three and this is a big problem,” Dr. Rubin said.

Despite the expansion of ongoing vaccination efforts, the rising case numbers have county officials contemplating what needs to be done.

RELATED: Allergies or COVID: How to tell the difference

“We may very well have to clamp down within a matter of days. I’m not promising that one way or another,” Dr. Rubin said. “We need to evaluate exactly what kinds of activities and movements are really pushing this surge.”

That could mean bringing back restrictions on businesses.

“We need to continue to be safe and those are really the messages and if we need to clamp down more on our [mitigation], you know, back off a little bit on indoor kinds of activities and restaurants and fitness clubs and such like that — we hope that it won’t reach that point that we may need to do that,” Dr. Rubin added.

Evanston resident Archie Ong has seen his city go through so many changes over the past year

“It’s going to be a major setback, obviously, a lot of the restaurants here are struggling,” Ong said. “There’s been a number of restaurants that have closed so I hope, I hope it doesn’t happen.”

RELATED: COVID vaccine: Read these tips before getting your shot

He and his family still stay home for the most part and hopes others who may think the worse is over will do the same.

“People are getting vaccinated and thinking it’s safe. I guess it is maybe safe but at the same time I think we shouldn’t really relax that much,” Ong added.

For now, health officials recommend keeping things outdoors while continuing to mask up and keep distance.

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Chicago COVID: Restrictions may return in suburban Cook County if coronavirus cases continue to rise, health officials say

CHICAGO (WLS) — Suburban Cook County may be on the brink of having new restrictions imposed after health officials reported a sharp increase in COVID-19 case numbers.

“We’ve seen over 600 new cases in suburban Cook in our jurisdiction alone,” said Dr. Rachel Rubin. “And so that means that we are in the beginnings of another surge.”

Now, county health officials said the uptick in cases could translate to new restrictions imposed if those numbers don’t go down.

According to recent data, the most significant rise in cases is among the 20s and 30 age group, and the positivity rate nearly doubled from weeks past.

“Our overall positivity rate, I think, is now maybe about five, we were down to three and this is a big problem,” Dr. Rubin said.

Despite the expansion of ongoing vaccination efforts, the rising case numbers have county officials contemplating what needs to be done.

RELATED: Allergies or COVID: How to tell the difference

“We may very well have to clamp down within a matter of days. I’m not promising that one way or another,” Dr. Rubin said. “We need to evaluate exactly what kinds of activities and movements are really pushing this surge.”

That could mean bringing back restrictions on businesses.

“We need to continue to be safe and those are really the messages and if we need to clamp down more on our [mitigation], you know, back off a little bit on indoor kinds of activities and restaurants and fitness clubs and such like that — we hope that it won’t reach that point that we may need to do that,” Dr. Rubin added.

Evanston resident Archie Ong has seen his city go through so many changes over the past year

“It’s going to be a major setback, obviously, a lot of the restaurants here are struggling,” Ong said. “There’s been a number of restaurants that have closed so I hope, I hope it doesn’t happen.”

RELATED: COVID vaccine: Read these tips before getting your shot

He and his family still stay home for the most part and hopes others who may think the worse is over will do the same.

“People are getting vaccinated and thinking it’s safe. I guess it is maybe safe but at the same time I think we shouldn’t really relax that much,” Ong added.

For now, health officials recommend keeping things outdoors while continuing to mask up and keep distance.

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8K Appointments to Be Released Wednesday – NBC Chicago

Cook County Health will release 8,000 first-dose COVID vaccine appointments Wednesday evening for individuals in Phases 1A, 1B and 1C.

The appointments will be released at 6 p.m. Wednesday and can be booked on the Cook County vaccine website or by calling the county’s hotline at (833) 308-1988. The call center will remain open until 10 p.m. Wednesday to accommodate the release, officials said.

Cook County’s vaccination appointments are open to all eligible Illinois residents. The appointments released Wednesday will be for four of the county’s five mass vaccination sites:

  • South Suburban College, 15800 State St. in South Holland
  • Triton College, 2000 5th Ave. in River Grove
  • A former K-Mart at 1155 E Oakton St in Des Plaines
  • Former HOBO at 7600 West Roosevelt Road in Forest Park

Officials said the county expects to release additional appointments based on vaccine supply as early as Thursday.

The new appointments came as Cook County announced that the suburban portions of the county – operating on a different framework than the city of Chicago – has moved into Phase 1C of its vaccination rollout.

For a complete look at who is eligible to receive the COVID vaccine and when in Illinois, click here.

“All essential workers – including clergy, restaurant staff, energy, legal, retail and transportation and logistics – are now eligible to receive vaccine,” the county said, noting that Phase 1C includes the last eligible groups before all residents age 16 and older will be able to get vaccinated in the coming weeks.

The county was previously in Phase 1B Plus. A complete list of Phase 1C eligible groups can be found on the CCDPH website. Anyone eligible in prior phases remains eligible for vaccinations moving forward.

The county’s last appointment drop was on Sunday, when 25,000 first-dose appointments were booked in less than two hours.

For a complete look at how to make a COVID vaccine appointment in Illinois, click here.



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COVID vaccine: Chicago expands eligibility to Phase 1C today with more essential workers, those with medical conditions able to get appointments

CHICAGO (WLS) — Chicago is opening up COVID vaccine eligibility to the Phase 1C group Monday.

The move means anyone 16 and older who has a qualifying medical condition can now book an appointment.

More types of essential workers are also now eligible, including workers in clergy and religious organizations, energy, finance, food and beverage service, higher education, information technology and communications, legal, media, other community or government-based operations and essential functions, personal care and hygiene, public health, public safety, retail, shelter and housing, transportation and logistics, water and wastewater.

RELATED: Chicago COVID vaccine map shows how many residents vaccinated by zip code

Also starting Monday, vaccination sites run by the city of Chicago will only schedule appointments for people who live in the city.

With the expansion to 1C, the majority of Chicago’s adult population is now eligible to get a vaccine. However, officials continuing to urge patience as eligibility does not guarantee an immediate appointment.

Why are COVID-19 vaccine supplies still limited?

“It took me a while,” said Michelle Gerol. “The process was a little frustrating, but once I got it, it was like finding the good ticket from the Willy Wonka movie.”

Cook County has yet to announce when it will open access to those in 1C, but did make 25,000 new appointments available at four of its mass vaccination sites Sunday afternoon. Anyone eligible under phases 1A, 1B, 1B+ and approved essential workers were able to sign up for the shot due to new state guidelines, however, those appointments were booked up in just under two hours.

“It was 50,000 people in the waiting room with only 2,500 vaccines,” said vaccine hunter Maria Koikas.

Koikas started helping others enroll when she saw how difficult the process was for her own parents.

“It is a million people going for the same hot concert ticket that there is only 100 of them,” she said.

RELATED: 3 generations of West Englewood family get COVID-19 vaccine together

In the last month, Koikas has enrolled nearly 300 people and counting. Her advice is to check often, be prepared for the appointment drop, and don’t give up.

For parts of Illinois outside of Chicago and Cook County, more groups become eligible for vaccinations Monday.

RELATED: Coronavirus Illinois: COVID vaccine distribution by county, region

Food and beverage workers, construction workers and religious leaders are now able to get their shots.

Illinois is set to open eligibility to anyone 16 and older on April 12.

To date, two million Illinois residents, which is 16% of the state population, have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19. The state has been vaccinating over 99,000 people a day on average.

Gov. JB Pritzker said he may be forced to rethink his approach to fully reopening the state fully, which it was on pace to start next week.

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25K New Vaccine Appointments Booked in Less Than 2 Hours, Cook County Officials Say – NBC Chicago

Cook County Health says that 25,000 coronavirus vaccination appointments released Sunday were snapped up in less than two hours.

According to officials, the appointments were released to the public at noon, with residents in Phase 1A, Phase 1B, Phase 1B-Plus, and certain other residents who were previously included in Phase 1C eligible.

Within a span of less than two hours, the first-dose appointments, which were set to be available at one of four suburban sites, were all gone, with officials confirming that information Sunday afternoon.

Cook County has moved into Phase 1B-Plus of coronavirus vaccinations, with that new group including individuals 16 or older with a preexisting medical condition or other comorbidity.

As of Sunday, nearly 1.1 million doses of the coronavirus vaccine have been administered in suburban Cook County. Approximately 16.49% of the population has been fully vaccinated against coronavirus, with more than 400,000 residents having received both shots.

 The county is averaging 21,293 doses administered per day, and has an on-hand inventory of more than 140,000.

The state of Illinois is set to move into Phase 1C of its vaccination program on Monday, and is expected to announce that all residents 16 and older will be eligible to sign up for vaccination appointments beginning on April 12.



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Winter Storm Warning Issued for Parts of NE Illinois, NW Indiana With Heavy Snow Expected – NBC Chicago

The National Weather Service has issued a winter storm warning for portions of Illinois and Indiana as heavy snow and frigid wind chills are expected through Tuesday morning.

The warning will go into effect at 6 p.m. Sunday in Kankakee and eastern Will Counties in Illinois, along with Lake, Porter, Newton and Jasper counties in northwest Indiana. The warning will remain in effect through 9 a.m. Tuesday.

All of Cook County will also be under a winter storm warning beginning at 3 a.m. Monday and running through noon on Tuesday.

According to the warning, frigid temperatures and occasional snow are in the forecast for Sunday night, with the main threat of snow coming during the evening commute on Monday. Approximately 4-to-8 inches of snow are possible in the affected areas, and areas closer to Lake Michigan could see even more snow due to lake-effect enhancement.

Wind chills of up to 20 degrees below zero are also possible in the impacted counties, with frigid overnight temperatures potentially impacting the effectiveness of salt and other road treatments, according to the warning.

A winter weather advisory has been issued for Lake County in Illinois, along with Kane, DuPage, LaSalle, Kendall, Grundy and northern and southern Will counties. The advisory will go into effect at noon Monday and run through 9 a.m. Tuesday.

Bursts of snowfall are expected in the impacted areas, with frigid wind chills also posing a threat in those communities.



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