COVID-19 Update: New guidance on indoor dining, vaccination plan, new
virus strain, sports
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[January 16, 2021]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Gov. JB Pritzker announced
revisions to his COVID-19 mitigation tiers Friday that would allow
earlier indoor dining, but no regions have thus far met the
requirements.
He also announced that the whole state would move to Phase 1B of
vaccination efforts as of Jan. 25, while some counties might already
individually have entered that phase. As well, a new, more contagious
strain of the coronavirus has been confirmed to be spreading in
Illinois.
Per the revisions, indoor dining will be allowed in Phase 1 of the
mitigation plan with the lesser of 25 people or 25 percent capacity
allowed. An establishment must serve food to be able to offer indoor
service, reservations will be required, tables will be limited to four
people each, and the establishments must be closed between the hours of
11 p.m. and 6 a.m.
None of the 11 mitigation regions are in that phase, however, and only
three were moved from Tier 3 to Tier 2 Friday, according to the
governor. They include Region 1 in northern Illinois, Region 2 in
north-central Illinois and Region 5 in southern Illinois.
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Those regions met the state requirements to move out of Tier 3, which
all regions have been in since Nov. 20. The requirements include having
a test positivity rate below 12 percent for three consecutive days, 20
percent available ICU and hospital beds for three days, and a sustained
decrease in the number of people in the hospital with COVID-19 for seven
out of 10 days.
“Some examples of loosened mitigations in Tier 2 include the return of
group fitness classes, the return of lower-risk youth and recreational
sports and the reopening of cultural institutions like museums at 25
percent capacity with social distancing,” Gov. Pritzker said at a Friday
briefing that took place virtually.
Pritzker said if current trends hold, most regions will be out of Tier 3
in the coming days.
The announcement came as the rolling seven-day average COVID-19 case
positivity rate continued to decline statewide for the seventh straight
day, dropping to 6.5 percent.
Hospitalizations continued on a steady decline as well, with 3,446
people hospitalized for COVID-19 at the end of Thursday, including 712
in intensive care unit beds and 386 on ventilators.
To move into Tier 1, a region must have a test positivity rate below 8
percent for three consecutive days and meet the same hospitalization
requirements that allowed it to move into Tier 2.
To move from Tier 1 to basic Phase 4 mitigations, a region must have a
positivity rate below 6.5 percent for three days while meeting the same
requirements for hospital bed availability.
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Vaccine plan
Illinois has received 995,000 doses of Pfizer-BioNtech and Moderna
vaccines for COVID-19 and administered 447,348, although administrators
have three days from when the vaccine is administered to when they must
report it to the state.
Pritzker noted the state “anticipates substantially completing Phase 1A
next week and moving into Phase 1B of the Vaccine Plan on Jan. 25.”
Phase 1A includes long-term care residents and frontline health care
workers. Phase 1B includes non-health care essential workers, residents
over the age of 65 and inmates.
“While shipments from the federal government remain limited, the state
is building out wide-reaching capacity to prepare for additional
shipments and ensure those eligible in Phase 1B can receive their
vaccine as quickly and equitably as possible,” the governor’s office
said.
There is no timeline for Phase 1C at this time. It would include people
aged 16 to 64 years old with high-risk medical conditions and other
essential workers, according to the state’s plan which continues to
evolve.
Pritzker said starting next week “and increasing over the coming several
weeks,” the state will “be bringing online hundreds of vaccination sites
across the state."
Those include retail pharmacy chain locations; Illinois National Guard
mobile teams; state-run mass vaccination locations in northern, central
and southern Illinois; hospitals and urgent care locations; and, in
time, doctor’s offices and large employers who can host their own
workplace clinics.
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![](../images/011621pics/news_a81.jpg)
Gov. JB Pritzker discussed the moving of three
Illinois regions to lesser Tier 2 mitigations Friday during a
virtual news conference to discuss the state's fight against
COVID-19. Pritzker moved his scheduled in-person event to an online
event after a positive COVID-19 case was reported Thursday at the
Capitol, where the governor had presided over the re-election of
Sen. Don Harmon as Senate president a day earlier. (Credit:
blueroomstream.com)
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“By implementing a wide variety of locations, some appointment-based and
some walk up, all across the state, Illinois is driving forward with an
equitable accessible framework for administering vaccines,” Pritzker
said.
He said the plan is an effort to deliver and administer vaccines as
quickly as they are received from manufacturers.
“The plan coordinates our 97 local health departments statewide who
operate clinics already and will open up more as vaccine supply grows,”
Pritzker said, noting individual counties are accelerating entry into
Phase 1B as well.
Two National Guard teams will expand vaccination clinics in Cook County
starting Tuesday, with “nearly two dozen more National Guard teams ready
to come online across the state in the weeks ahead as vaccination supply
increases.”
Beginning Jan. 25, Pritzker said, the state will launch the Illinois
COVID-19 vaccination administration plan website, “giving everyone the
ability to find a nearby vaccination site and information about how to
make an appointment.”
“All of this however, can only extend so far, but our weekly shipments
remain still relatively small,” he said.
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2021/Jan/16/images/ads/current/werth_lda_LUAL_2020.png)
New variant
While Pritzker highlighted progress, he noted masking, hand washing and
avoiding large gatherings will still be important as the virus evolves.
A new variant first discovered in the U.K. has been identified in
Chicago. Vaccines are expected to still be effective against the new
variant.
“Clearly some progress has been made to combat this virus across our
regions,” Pritzker said. “But I want to stress that it's incredibly
important for Illinoisans to not let their guard down. We have now
formally identified the first Illinois case of the more contagious
British variant. And on top of that there are new variants from Japan,
South Africa, Nigeria and Brazil, that we also know a little bit about.”
According to a news release, the new U.K. strain was first identified in
the U.S. two weeks ago in Colorado and has since been identified in
several other states.
“Evidence suggests that this variant can spread more easily than most
currently-circulating strains of COVID-19, but there is no evidence that
the new strain affects the sensitivity of diagnostic tests or that it
causes more severe illness or increased risk of death,” according to the
news release. “In addition, data suggest current vaccines will be
effective and safe in providing protection against the variant.”
Organized sports
Pritzker’s office noted organized sports can resume in Tier 2 under the
guidance initially offered by the Illinois Department of Public Health.
That means sports classified as “low risk,” such as baseball, track,
cross country, gymnastics and swimming, will be allowed to participate
in competitive intra-conference play in regions in Tier 2 or better.
Medium-risk sports including soccer and volleyball can participate in
team scrimmages in those tiers, while high risk sports such as
basketball, football, hockey and wrestling can participate in no-contact
training.
![](http://archives.lincolndailynews.com/2021/Jan/16/images/ads/current/Rolfs_lda_LUAL_2017.png)
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