|  All healthcare workers, including nursing home 
			employees, all P-12 teachers and staff, as well as higher education 
			personnel and students will now be required to receive an initial 
			dose of the COVID-19 vaccine by September 19, 2021. The extended 
			deadline came at the request of the Illinois Health and Hospital 
			Association (IHA), as well as education leaders including the 
			Illinois Education Association (IEA), Illinois Federation of 
			Teachers (IFT), Illinois Association of School Administrators (IASA), 
			and Illinois Principals Association (IPA), who best understand the 
			localized needs of hospitals and schools implementing their own 
			testing, vaccine and accountability protocols. 
 Entities continue to be permitted and encouraged to put in place 
			more stringent vaccination requirements. The Executive Order does 
			not prohibit any entity from implementing a requirement that 
			personnel, contractors, students or other visitors be fully 
			vaccinated without providing the alternative to test on a weekly 
			basis consistent with applicable law.
 
 
			 
			“Vaccines remain our strongest tool to protect ourselves from 
			COVID-19, the Delta variant, and most crucially, to maintain our 
			healthcare system’s ability to care for anyone who walks through 
			their doors in need of help,” said Governor JB Pritzker. “While 
			hospitals and schools move forward in good faith, this extension 
			ensures they are prepared to meet this requirement to better protect 
			our most vulnerable residents and children who are not yet eligible 
			to get vaccinated.”
 
 “Even as our hospitals and schools are taking the necessary steps to 
			ensure compliance with the testing and accountability measures 
			mandated in Executive Order 2021-22, we recognize that some 
			institutions will need additional time in which to establish 
			procedures that will guarantee they are compliant,” said IDPH 
			Director Dr. Ngozi Ezike. “Our primary goal is to make sure that 
			healthcare workers, education employees and students are protected, 
			along with their families and communities, and this extension will 
			help us achieve that goal.”
 
 To combat the more contagious Delta variant, on August 26, 2021, the 
			Governor announced that all healthcare workers, P-12 teachers and 
			staff, higher education personnel and students would be required to 
			receive the COVID-19 vaccine or submit to regular testing 
			requirements. With Executive Order 2021-22, workers and students in 
			applicable settings must receive the first dose of a two-dose 
			vaccination series or a single-dose vaccination by September 19, 
			2021. The two-week extension will allow for more schools and 
			hospitals to implement the new accountability measures. The second 
			doses of either two-dose vaccine must be received by 30 days after 
			the first dose, as directed by vaccine providers.
 
 "I deeply appreciate how hard schools are working to protect 
			students and educators while offering the highest quality in-person 
			learning experience," said State Superintendent of Education Dr. 
			Carmen I. Ayala. "Our school leaders said they needed more time to 
			plan and communicate, and I thank Gov. Pritzker and Dr. Ezike for 
			providing this extension. While testing is an option for all school 
			personnel, vaccination is the safest and most effective defense 
			against COVID-19. I encourage everyone who works with our students 
			to use this extra time to get vaccinated."
 
 
			
			 
			The extension will also allow for more time to put additional 
			testing protocols in place, given that individuals who are unable or 
			unwilling to receive the vaccine are required to get tested for 
			COVID-19 at least once per week to prevent further spread. IDPH and 
			the Illinois State Board of Education (ISBE) may require increased 
			testing in the event of positive cases. Healthcare professionals, 
			school workers, and higher education personnel and students who do 
			not provide proof of vaccination will be required to follow the 
			testing protocol in order to enter healthcare and educational 
			facilities.
 “The Illinois Health and Hospital Association 
			applauds Governor Pritzker’s extension to the deadline by which the 
			testing requirement must be implemented,” said IHA President & CEO 
			A.J. Wilhelmi.  
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            “We share the Governor’s goal of vaccinating 
			healthcare workers against COVID-19 to protect themselves, their 
			families, patients and communities against severe disease, long-term 
			health consequences and possible death. Hospitals continue to be on 
			the frontlines fighting the pandemic during this latest surge of the 
			virus, while simultaneously continuing to make progress in 
			vaccinating healthcare workers. The Governor’s welcome announcement 
			will grant hospitals additional time to meet the testing 
			requirement.”
 “Today’s announcement of the two-week deadline extension on the 
			governor’s Executive Order on vaccines is welcome news,” said 
			Illinois Education Association President Kathi Griffin. “We have 
			said all along that the best place for students to be is in the 
			classroom, as long as it’s safe. We believe the governor’s executive 
			order – which encourages all education employees from preschool 
			through college to be vaccinated and if they can’t, or won’t, then 
			to be tested weekly – will help keep schools open and all those who 
			work and learn inside them safe.”
 
 "We welcome today's extension from Governor Pritzker. It is an 
			important step that will help educators and school staff work with 
			management to comply with the vaccine mandate,” said Illinois 
			Federation of Teachers President Dan Montgomery. “To be clear, we 
			believe that the best place for students to learn is in the 
			classroom, and that can best be accomplished by following the 
			science and public health guidelines and getting everyone vaccinated 
			who can be vaccinated. We continue to work toward that goal."
 
 “To give school districts more time to logistically prepare for full 
			implementation of a COVID-19 vaccination and testing program, we 
			appreciate the Governor postponing the timeline by two weeks,” said 
			Illinois Association of School Administrators Executive Director Dr. 
			Brent Clark.
 
 
            
			 
            
			“With the increased risks posed to young people by the COVID-19 
			Delta variant, the IPA recognizes the critical role vaccinations and 
			testing play for young people to remain in-person at school and stay 
			healthy while doing so,” said Illinois Principals Association 
			Executive Director Dr. Jason Leahy. “Additionally, we appreciate the 
			Governor’s recognition of the time needed for school leaders, 
			teachers, and staff to set up the systems needed for these new 
			requirements.”
 
 As of today, 8.4 million Illinoisans (66.2%) have received at least 
			one dose of the vaccine, and 6.5 million are fully vaccinated 
			(51.4%). Illinois continues to be a leader in the Midwest in 
			vaccinating its residents, with 61% of children between the ages or 
			12 and 17, 78.7% of adults and 93.7% of seniors vaccinated to date.
 
 From the onset of the pandemic, the Pritzker administration has 
			implemented policies and guidelines in accordance with the Centers 
			for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) to slow the spread of the 
			virus and protect the health and safety of all residents. Building 
			on efforts to make access to the COVID-19 vaccine equitable and 
			accessible for frontline workers, the vaccine has been available for 
			healthcare and nursing home workers since December 15, 2020, and 
			open to teachers since January 25, 2021. In August, the 
			administration announced that employees at all state-run congregate 
			facilities would be required to be vaccinated. As of Monday, August 
			30, a statewide indoor mask mandate went into effect for all 
			Illinois residents, regardless of vaccination status, as COVID-19 
			cases and hospitalization rates continue to increase.
 
 Vaccines remain critical to keeping communities safe and ending the 
			pandemic. All Illinois residents over the age of 12 are eligible to 
			receive the COVID-19 vaccine at no cost and proof of immigration 
			status is not required to receive the vaccine. To find a vaccination 
			center near you, visit vaccines.gov.
 
            
			EXECUTIVE 
			ORDER 2021-22 - Pdf 
            [Office of the Governor JB Pritzker] 
            
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