City Health Commissioner Allison Arwady, M.D. updates the press and public on the course of the pandemic on Feb. 1. --Screenshot from a City of Chicago Facebook livestream

City Health Commissioner Allison Arwady, M.D. updates the press and public on the course of the pandemic on Feb. 1. --Screenshot from a City of Chicago Facebook livestream

Ease off vax regs, aldermen ask

Spread the love

Quinn, Burke, Tabares say regs ‘cripple’ businesses 

By Tim Hadac

With numbers of newly diagnosed COVID-19 cases falling across the city, the three aldermen serving Clearing and Garfield Ridge are among 11 City Council members who last week called on Chicago Department of Public Health Allison Arwady, M.D. to rescind a pandemic regulation many have called anti-business.

GSWNH QuinnAtCulvers 100121

Alderman Marty Quinn

Public Health Order No. 2021-2 (issued Dec. 21 and amended Jan. 26) requires any person age 5 or older to show proof of full vaccination against COVID-19 to dine indoors, visit gyms or enjoy entertainment venues where food or drink are being served.

The order requires businesses and other establishments to develop and keep a written record describing the protocol for implementing and enforcing the requirements of the order. Those written record must available for inspection by city inspectors.

A number of businesses across the city, including several in Clearing and Garfield Ridge, have found themselves slapped with $2,000 fines for alleged failure to comply.

Aldermen Marty Quinn (13th), Edward M. Burke (14th) and Silvana Tabares (23rd) all signed the Feb. 9 letter.

Citing declining COVID-19 case numbers, the aldermen said, “…the science tells us it is time to loosen the regulations that crippled both virus and business alike.

“Restaurants and bars have been crushed by the mask and vaccine mandates,” the aldermen continued. “The numbers prove we are no longer in an emergency, as positivity rates have are close to where Chicago was at the start of last year’s Lollapalooza.”

With an eye on Chicagoans heading out to bars and restaurants for Valentine’s Day, as well as Super Bowl Sunday, the aldermen asked Arwady to rescind the order by Friday, Feb. 11.

As of the Clear-Ridge Reporter & NewsHound’s printing deadline, Arwady had not responded to the request.

At a public update on the pandemic on Feb. 1, Arwady said the COVID-19 trends in Chicago are “looking quite good” and the easing of her public orders “could occur relatively soon.”

CRRNH ArwadyFeb1Briefing 021622

City Health Commissioner Allison Arwady, M.D. updates the press and public on the course of the pandemic on Feb. 1. –Screenshot from a City of Chicago Facebook livestream

“I want to be able to lift this [public health order]…but only at a time where we’re confident it won’t lead to a major rebound or unnecessarily put more folks at risk,” she added.

Arwady said she continues to base pandemic mitigation measures not on the calendar but “how the outbreak is behaving.”

“I don’t have a timeline on it,” she added. “I’m not changing. I’m not pushing the deadline.”

Local News

SRP-IMAGE-Logo

Clear-Ridge Reporter and NewsHound May 10, 2023

Spread the love

Spread the love

From left, Chicago's Arin Wright and Tierna Davidson jostle with Gotham's Taylor Smith on May 5 at SeatGeek Stadium in Bridgeview. Photo by Jeff Vorva

Pro Sports Report | Red Stars finish rough week with Gotham loss

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Jeff Vorva Staff Writer The first week of May was a bad week for the Chicago Red Stars, on and off the field. It started May 3 with a 3-0 loss at Houston in the first round of the Challenge Cup. The next day, the team fired general manager Michelle Lomnicki for…

Nazareth graduate Ryan McGee, a goalie for the Concordia Chicago women’s lacrosse team, was named to the All-Northern Athletics Collegiate Conference First Team. Photo courtesy of Concordia University Chicago Athletics

College Notebook | Concordia Chicago goalie McGee named to lacrosse all-conference team

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Mike Walsh Correspondent Ryan McGee is one of four Concordia University Chicago women’s lacrosse athletes to be chosen to the 2023 All-Northern Athletics Collegiate Conference Team. McGee, a goalie who prepped at Nazareth, was one of two Cougars named to the All-NACC First Team. For McGee, this marks her third consecutive All-NACC…

John Nee celebrates his Hall of Fame induction with friends and family. St. Rita photo

Baseball and Softball Wrap | St. Rita coach Nee honored with HOF nod

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Jeff Vorva Staff Writer John Nee looks back with fondness at his early baseball days, when he was a big-time slugger playing with his friends for West Lawn’s baseball team. “Neighborhood baseball was all it could be,” Nee said. “Everybody played for their neighborhood team, and we have some really good teams…

Roshawn Russell is changing jobs from head basketball coach at St. Rita to associate coach at St Laurence. Photo by Jeff Vorva

Area Sports Roundup | St. Rita hoops coach resigns for job at St. Laurence

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Jeff Vorva Staff Writer The spinning carousal continues for the St. Rita basketball program. By the time the 2023-24 campaign rolls around, the talented team that picked up national attention last season will look a whole lot different — and it’s not just about players transferring. Roshawn Russell, who coached the Mustangs…

Joan Hadac

A ‘kind and giving heart’

Spread the love

Spread the love. Family, friends remember columnist Joan Hadac From staff reports Those who knew Joan (Heelan) Hadac never seemed surprised that she landed in jobs where she helped people. It was simply her nature, her kind and giving heart, they’d say. A lifelong Southwest Side resident, Mrs. Hadac died at home in hospice care…

st. laurence logo

Baseball | St. Laurence senior Luke Geary embraces role in ‘pen

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Steve Millar Correspondent Many pitchers would prefer the certainty and routine of knowing when they were going to take the mound. St. Laurence’s Luke Geary, though, enjoys always being on-call. The senior is thriving in a bullpen role. “I really like it,” Geary said. “The starters have one day a week where…

Orland Park native Dylan Jacobs, a graduate transfer who runs distance for the Tennessee track and field team, set a new personal record and three other all-time marks in his first outdoor event as a member of the Volunteers.. Photo By Cayce Smith/Tennessee Athletics

Distance runner Dylan Jacobs has set records at every level, and he has his eyes on the Olympics

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Mike Walsh Correspondent If there is anything that Dylan Jacobs has learned over the years, it’s that Mom is always right. As youth growing up in Orland Park, Jacobs — now a standout runner at the University of Tennessee — played soccer, baseball and basketball. One day, he decided he was done…

SRP-IMAGE-Logo

Clear-Ridge Reporter and NewsHound May 3, 2023

Spread the love

Spread the love

Chicago Christian senior shortstop Lizzie Sedakis was hitting .836 with 10 homers through 18 games. The IHSA season record for batting average is .768, set in 2018. Photo by Jeff Vorva

Baseball and Softball Wrap | Lizzie Sedakis is a hitting machine for Chicago Christian

Spread the love

Spread the loveBy Jeff Vorva Staff Writer When Lizzie Sedakis was playing t-ball at age 5, her father gave her some advice. Dave Sedakis was not a baseball player in his high school days, but his hitting suggestions resonate with her today. “My dad taught me how to hit,” Lizzie said. “He taught me three…

Neighbors

After 3 years, state poised to enforce law aiming to end lending discrimination

After 3 years, state poised to enforce law aiming to end lending discrimination

By PETER HANCOCK Capitol News Illinois phancock@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – In 1977, then-President Jimmy Carter signed into law the Community Reinvestment Act, a federal law that sought to wipe away the last vestiges of racial discrimination and redlining in America’s home mortgage industry. The idea was simple. By requiring lenders – primarily banks – to make…

Capitol News Illinois partners with ‘Illinois Lawmakers’ program to bring it back to air

Capitol News Illinois partners with ‘Illinois Lawmakers’ program to bring it back to air

Capitol News Illinois announced today it will produce the long-running “Illinois Lawmakers” program this spring, in partnership with longtime host and producer Jak Tichenor.  “This new partnership is absolutely critical to providing Illinois residents with reliable, independent, in-depth, up to date coverage from the Illinois Capitol after many newspapers and broadcasters shuttered their Statehouse bureaus over…

Election officials to weigh whether Darren Bailey and GOP operative Dan Proft illegally coordinated

Election officials to weigh whether Darren Bailey and GOP operative Dan Proft illegally coordinated

By ANDREW ADAMS & HANNAH MEISEL Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com CHICAGO – A year and a half after Republican Darren Bailey lost his campaign to challenge Gov. JB Pritzker, state election officials are weighing whether he illegally colluded with conservative radio show host and political operative Dan Proft in the 2022 campaign. The State Board…

Immigrant advocates tout new report showing benefits of state-funded health plans

Immigrant advocates tout new report showing benefits of state-funded health plans

By PETER HANCOCK  and JERRY NOWICKI  Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – Immigrant rights advocates on Friday continued to push for one of their top budget priorities: full funding for state-run health care programs that benefit noncitizens, regardless of their immigration status. Those programs offer health coverage for low-income individuals who would otherwise qualify for…

As state continues to inventory lead pipes, full replacement deadlines are decades away

As state continues to inventory lead pipes, full replacement deadlines are decades away

By COLE LONGCOR Capitol News Illinois Clongcor@capitolnewsillinois.com Lead pipes in public water systems and drinking fixtures have been banned in new construction since 1986, when Congress amended the Safe Drinking Water Act, but they are still in use across the U.S. and in Illinois.  The presence of lead pipes has persisted due in part to…

Capitol Briefs: State unveils report on racial disparities among homeless populations

Capitol Briefs: State unveils report on racial disparities among homeless populations

By ANDREW ADAMS Capitol News Illinois aadams@capitolnewsillinois.com Tackling homelessness requires addressing racial injustice, according to a new report commissioned by the state’s Office to Prevent and End Homelessness.  The report found that Black people are eight times more likely to experience homelessness than white people. Remedying this disparity, according to the report, would require “long-term…

Flooding is Illinois’ Most Threatening Natural Disaster. Are We Prepared?

Flooding is Illinois’ Most Threatening Natural Disaster. Are We Prepared?

by Meredith Newman, Illinois Answers Project April 16, 2024 This story was originally published by the Illinois Answers Project. The electricity in Mary Buchanan’s home in West Garfield Park was not working – again.  The outage lasted four days, starting just after a crew dug up her front lawn to install a check valve in…

Bears pitch $3.2B stadium plan, but Pritzker still ‘skeptical’ despite team’s $2B pledge

Bears pitch $3.2B stadium plan, but Pritzker still ‘skeptical’ despite team’s $2B pledge

By DILPREET RAJU & JERRY NOWICKI Capitol News Illinois news@capitolnewsillinois.com The Chicago Bears laid out a $3.2 billion plan for a new domed stadium on Chicago’s lakefront on Wednesday afternoon, painting pictures of future Super Bowls and other major public events while pinning their hopes on yet-to-be-had conversations with the governor and lawmakers.  The Bears…

Regulators weigh future of gas industry in Illinois, while clamping down on Chicago utility

Regulators weigh future of gas industry in Illinois, while clamping down on Chicago utility

By ANDREW ADAMS Capitol News Illinois aadams@capitolnewsillinois.com CHICAGO – Natural gas is fueling a fight between consumer advocates, a powerful utility company and the state. Amid competing advertising campaigns, accusations of mismanagement and state decarbonization efforts, the Illinois Commerce Commission is starting a process that will shape how the state regulates the increasingly controversial industry. …

Komatsu mining truck named 2024 ‘coolest thing made in Illinois’

Komatsu mining truck named 2024 ‘coolest thing made in Illinois’

By COLE LONGCOR Capitol News Illinois Clongcor@capitolnewsillinois.com SPRINGFIELD – A mining truck manufactured by Komatsu was crowned the winner of the 2024 “Makers Madness” contest, earning the title of “the coolest thing made in Illinois” at the Governor’s Mansion Wednesday.  The truck was one of more than 200 entries in the 5th annual contest hosted…