Pritzker ‘looking at all possible mitigations;’ masks mandated at driver
facilities
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[July 29, 2021]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Masks will be required at
driver’s license facilities in Illinois starting Monday, Secretary of
State Jesse White announced Wednesday, and Gov. JB Pritzker said he is
“looking at all the possible mitigations” amid another surge of COVID-19
infections.
The secretary of state’s announcement came one day after the Illinois
Department of Public Health and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and
Prevention updated guidance to recommend individuals in areas with
“substantial risk” or greater for the spread of COVID-19 should wear
face coverings regardless of vaccination status.
“Substantial” risk occurs when new cases are between 50 to 99 per
100,000 people over a 7-day period, while “high” risk occurs when cases
exceed that amount. A CDC county map, viewable at, shows much of the
state’s western half along the Missouri border is at high or substantial
risk, as is most of southern Illinois.
The CDC also recommended masks be worn by all individuals in K-12
schools, and IDPH announced it “fully aligns” with the federal guidance.
The governor warned Monday that districts disobeying guidance could face
civil liability.
White’s new mask requirement will also apply to the Illinois State
Capitol and all secretary of state offices. The announcement came as the
state reported 2,082 new COVID-19 cases, the most since May 7, and the
case positivity rate rose to 4 percent, the highest since April 19.
The guidance that all people in school buildings should wear face
coverings comes just 18 days after the CDC released guidance saying
masks were suggested only for those who had not been vaccinated.
Dr. Rochelle Walensky of the CDC said in a Tuesday briefing the main
reason for the change in guidance is the fact that the COVID-19 delta
variant – which makes up “eight in 10” of the COVID-19 cases that have
had been sequenced in laboratories – is less predictable and more
transmissible than previous versions of the virus. It’s also due to the
fact that fewer people than expected have chosen to become vaccinated
nationwide.
“When we released our school guidance on July 9, we had less delta
variant in this country, we had fewer cases in this country, and
importantly, we were really hopeful that we would have more people
vaccinated, especially in the demographic between 12 to 17 years old,”
Walensky said according to an audio recording posted to the CDC website.
She said the guidance is aimed at protecting those who cannot be
vaccinated, such as children 11 years of age and younger and those who
are immunocompromised.
While Pritzker said the state has “wanted school districts to make
decisions for themselves throughout the last year to keep their
districts safe,” school districts face the risk of being held liable in
civil courts “if they don't live up to the standard that is set by the
CDC.”
The Illinois State Board of Education echoed those comments in a
statement Wednesday.
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A graphic from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention website shows which counties in Illinois are at a
substantial and high risk for COVID-19 spread. (Credit CDC.gov)
“Illinois fully adopted the CDC's updated guidance
for K-12 schools on July 27, which recommends universal indoor
masking for all teachers, staff, students, and visitors to K-12
schools, regardless of vaccination status,” an ISBE spokesperson
said in an email. “School boards that choose not to implement public
health guidance are putting their students and staff at risk and
should consult with their insurers as to potential liability.”
Other than that, ISBE’s most recent guidance, encouraging school
boards to work with local health departments on mitigations, remains
in place.
Pandemic of the unvaccinated
Walensky characterized current spread of COVID-19 as a “pandemic of
the unvaccinated.” She said while the vast majority of disease
transmission is happening between unvaccinated individuals, there
are “rare occasions” in which vaccinated people have been spreading
the virus to others, which necessitated the guidance for vaccinated
individuals to wear face coverings.
But the vaccine is largely effective in preventing severe illness,
hospitalization and death in those who receive it.
“We continue to estimate that the risk of a breakthrough infection
with symptoms upon exposure to the delta variant is reduced by seven
fold. The reduction is 20 fold for hospitalizations and deaths,”
Walensky said.
Walensky also said a major concern as the virus continues to spread
and mutate is that it eventually evolves into a “very transmissible
virus that has the potential to evade our vaccine in terms of how it
protects us from severe disease and death.”
While “we’re not there yet,” she said, that mutation could be as few
as “two mutations away” from the current circulating variants.
As of now, 99 percent of COVID-19 deaths in Illinois are occurring
in unvaccinated individuals, Pritzker has said.
As of Tuesday night there were 857 people hospitalized for COVID-19
across the state, a high since June 4 and a 50 percent increase from
exactly one week ago.
Intensive care bed usage by COVID-19 patients is up 56 percent from
a week ago, with 184 beds in use by COVID-19 patients, including 74
on ventilators.
Another six deaths were attributed to the virus Wednesday, bringing
the confirmed death toll in Illinois to 23,420, with 2,473 probable
COVID-19 deaths as well since the pandemic began.
The pace of vaccinations continued to slow Wednesday, with 17,982
doses administered daily over the past week, down from a peak of
130,000 in April. About half of the state’s population has been
fully vaccinated, according to IDPH.
Capitol News Illinois is a nonprofit, nonpartisan
news service covering state government and distributed to more than
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Press Foundation and the Robert R. McCormick Foundation. |