Pritzker: ‘Stay tuned’ for new guidance on masks
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[February 09, 2022]
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Illinoisans should stay tuned
for an announcement on the state’s indoor mask mandate, Gov. JB Pritzker
said at an unrelated news conference Tuesday, although he declined to
say specifically what changes might be coming.
“I think I've said over the last few press conferences that I really
believe that we ought to be looking seriously at how to ratchet that
back,” Pritzker said of his mask mandates. “I think we're going to be
making announcements very soon about that.”
When pressed for what metrics the state is watching, Pritzker pointed to
hospitalizations, although he did not say what thresholds would need to
be met for changes to be triggered to the mask mandate.
“I would remind people that it's downstate in southern Illinois and
central Illinois where we've had the highest numbers of people,
percentage-wise, filling ICU beds and hospital beds,” he said during a
news conference at a grocery store in Springfield. “And now that the
numbers are coming down, I think everybody, the doctors in particular,
feel much more comfortable about alleviating mitigations.”
As of Monday night, hospitalizations had dropped drastically across the
state from a recent January peak driven by the omicron variant of the
coronavirus. The 2,634 hospital beds in use by COVID-19 patients
statewide as of Monday night were down from the more than 7,300 in use
on a single day in January.
Intensive care bed use for COVID-19 had fallen from a Jan. 12 peak of
1,177 to 464 as of Monday night, although Illinois Department of Public
Health Data showed 70 of 73 available beds in southern Illinois were
occupied.
Approximately 63 percent of Illinois’ population was fully vaccinated as
of Wednesday, with nearly 70 percent having received at least one dose.
Pritzker has faced increasing pressures to issue new mask guidance in
recent weeks as other Democratic-led states such as California and New
Jersey have announced plans to roll back mask mandates. As well, a
ruling from a Sangamon County judge has thrown his authority to issue
school mask mandates into question.
House Republican Leader Jim Durkin, of Western Springs, aired concerns
about what he called a “go it alone” approach from the governor to the
pandemic response.
“Now we are entering year three of this top-down strategy, and we see
the chaos that it has caused,” Durkin wrote in a letter to the governor.
“Today I am dealing with irate parents scrambling for childcare to make
it to work, students being separated in school buildings, and no answers
from your administration. Your lack of a plan has forced people to give
up hope that they can ever have a normal life in Illinois.”
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Gov. JB Pritzker speaks at Schnucks grocery store in
Springfield Tuesday at a news conference touting his plan to suspend
the 1 percent tax on groceries for the upcoming fiscal year. He told
reporters to "stay tuned" for an upcoming announcement on the
state's mask mandate. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Jerry Nowicki)
The announcement is coming soon, Pritzker said, but the fact that
schools often serve as a central community hub makes the decision on how
to approach masking mandates more difficult.
“And so we've got to be very careful about how we remove those mask
mandates, and also making sure the schools are doing what's
responsible,” he said. “That they have the tests available going
forward. That they know when they should be thinking about, at the local
level, when they should be putting masks back on when there are
outbreaks and so on. So that's all, I think, in the careful planning
process and we'll be making an announcement.”
Beginning in August 2021, Pritzker issued a series of executive orders
related to the reopening of public schools. They included a requirement
that schools enforce a mask mandate for all students, staff and
visitors; that they require all school personnel either be vaccinated or
submit to weekly testing; and that they exclude from school premises for
specified periods of time any student or staff member who tests positive
for COVID-19 or who has been in close contact with someone who has.
On Friday, Sangamon County Judge Raylene Grischow issued a temporary
restraining order invalidating the mask and vaccine mandates for public
schools. The ruling applied to approximately 170 school districts that
were sued by parents and students.
Grischow ruled the mitigations amounted to a kind of “quarantine” and
that the Pritzker administration overstepped its bounds by issuing those
mandates through emergency rules.
On Monday, Pritzker slammed Grischow’s decision for cultivating “chaos”
for parents and families in the state, and he noted that Attorney
General Kwame Raoul has appealed to have the ruling overturned.
Pritzker urged school districts not included on the list of those being
sued to continue the course with the current mitigations as the state
awaits the decision from the 4th District Court of Appeals.
“We've gotten here because people have been responsible in Illinois,”
Pritzker said of declining hospitalization rates. “And so it's a
tremendous desire of mine to do what we did last summer, which is, you
know, take masks off and see if we can get through this now that we have
treatments, widespread vaccinations, testing available, and we all know
to wear a mask when things get more difficult.”
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. |