Pritzker has ‘no plans’ for added mitigations; ‘local control’ is focus
of new school guidelines
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[July 17, 2021]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The wide availability of
COVID-19 vaccines has changed the state’s approach for mitigating the
virus’ spread statewide and in schools.
For school districts, that means suggested rather than required
guidance, with an emphasis on local control in imposing mitigations.
For the governor’s office, that means there are “no plans” to reinstate
some of the mitigation measures and economic shutdowns that were
commonplace earlier in the pandemic.
“Restore Illinois mitigations that were enacted during the height of the
pandemic allowed for safe and proven infection prevention measures since
no vaccine was available,” a spokesperson for the governor’s office said
in an email Friday. “Currently there is no plan to implement any
additional mitigations now that there is an abundance of vaccine
available and accessible across Illinois. We encourage all Illinoisans
ages 12+ to get vaccinated as soon as possible.”
Previously, if a region had a positivity rate of 8 percent or higher for
three days, the governor’s office and Illinois Department of Public
Health had a menu of mitigations they could put in place, such as
closure of indoor dinning and capacity restrictions at businesses. But,
because of the vaccine’s availability, those options aren’t currently on
the table, even as positivity rates rise in some areas and a more
contagious variant of the virus spreads.
The state’s guidance currently “recommends” face coverings in public
indoor places for those who are unvaccinated, while masks are required
on public transportation and in medical facilities.
The “recommended” masking guidance will be the same for schools after
the state fully adopted U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
guidance last week. Schools are also encouraged to maintain three feet
of distance between each student.
“Pursuant to CDC guidance, Illinois school districts have local control
over how they should work with local public health officials to
determine the prevention strategies needed in their area by monitoring
levels of community transmission and local vaccine coverage, and using
screening testing to detect cases in K-12 schools,” an Illinois State
Board of Education spokesperson said in an email Thursday.
In accordance with other CDC guidelines, masks will still be required
for all passengers on school buses, regardless of the school’s mask
policies.
Otherwise, districts are encouraged to take a “layered” mitigation
approach, accompanying masking and distancing with “screening testing,
cohorting, improved ventilation, handwashing and covering coughs and
sneezes, staying home when sick with symptoms of infectious illness
including COVID-19, and regular cleaning,” according to the CDC.
The guidance also recommends that if school administrators remove any
prevention strategies based on local conditions, they should do so “one
at a time and monitor closely (with adequate testing through the school
and/or community) for any increases in COVID-19 cases.”
Free testing programs are available to Illinois schools through IDPH,
while districts can also use federal Elementary and Secondary School
Emergency Relief funding for screening testing as well, according to
ISBE.
Operationally, ISBE has regulatory authority to reduce the recognition
status of any school district exhibiting “deficiencies that present a
health hazard or a danger to students or staff,” pursuant to state law,
according to the spokesperson. But the state board is not invoking that
authority.
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Gov. JB Pritzker speaks at a news conference at the
state's Illinois Emergency Management Agency offices in Springfield
last year. His office said Friday it has no plans for added
mitigations amid rising virus positivity rates. (Capitol News
Illinois file photo by Jerry Nowicki)
“ISBE is not currently taking any recognition action
against any school districts. We will continue to support school
districts in aligning with the new CDC guidance,” the spokesperson
said.
State Superintendent of Education Dr. Carmen Ayala
issued a declaration requiring resumption of in-person learning this
school year, provided remote instruction is made available for
students under quarantine.
“All our students deserve to return safely in-person to schools this
fall,” Ayala said in a news release. “With vaccination rates
continually rising and unprecedented federal funding to support safe
in-person learning, and mitigations such as contact tracing and
increased ventilation in place in schools, we are fully confident in
the safety of in-person learning this fall.”
Districts should also promote vaccination, which is “currently the
leading public health prevention strategy to end the COVID-19
pandemic,” according to the guidance.
Currently, only one of three vaccines being administered in the U.S.
is approved for use in children – the two-dose Pfizer-BioNTech
vaccine which has been approved for those 12 and older.
According to IDPH, approximately 55 percent of Illinoisans 12 and
older had been fully vaccinated against COVID-19 as of Friday, while
71 percent have received at least one dose.
The vaccination pace in Illinois has slowed, however, as the state
averaged 21,217 doses per day over the previous seven days as of
Friday, down from an April peak of more than 130,000 on average.
About half of the state’s population was fully vaccinated as of
Friday, but positivity rates were on the rise as well.
The seven-day average case positivity rate was 1.9 percent Friday,
tripling its 0.6 percent rate seen as recently as June 26. The Metro
East area near the St. Louis border, however, had a seven-day
average test positivity rate of 7.6 percent as of the latest data
reported Friday, while Region 3’s rate in west central Illinois was
5.3 percent and Region 5’s in southern Illinois was 6.1 percent. The
other regions were at about 2 percent or lower.
IDPH maintains a website that tracks county-level metrics through
which schools can monitor community spread based on test positivity
rates, new cases per 100,000, youth case increases and other
metrics. It measures risks based on scale of minimal to moderate to
substantial.
The metrics are updated weekly based on the previous week’s
transmission rates, and 13 counties had triggered a warning level as
of July 10, up from seven the previous week.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
400 newspapers statewide. It is funded primarily by the Illinois
Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation.
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