Republicans predict hospitality industry will be challenged by mandates,
not COVID
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[January 05, 2022]
By Greg Bishop
(The Center Square) – Republican
state lawmakers are demanding an end to Cook County requiring businesses
to deny indoor accommodations to anyone over 5 years old who doesn't
reveal their vaccine status.
Chicago Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection
Commissioner Ken Meyer on Tuesday said they’ll enforce the mandate that
went into effect this week.
“BACP will investigate complaints received through Chicago’s 3-1-1
system,” Meyer said at a news conference.
The mandate requires businesses with indoor dining, gym service or
indoor entertainment to deny service to anyone 5 years old or older who
does not show they are fully vaccinated for COVID-19.
The mandate is expected to mean large swaths of the
population won’t be allowed to dine indoors, go to a gym or take in
indoor entertainment.
Data from the Illinois Department of Public Health show 32% of
Illinoisans 5 and older are not fully vaccinated. For Chicagoans, data
at Chicago.gov show more than 40% of Latinos are not fully vaccinated.
More than 50% of Black Chicagoans are not fully vaccinated.
At a separate news conference Tuesday, state Rep. Tom Morrison,
R-Palatine, predicted convention planners will choose locations outside
of Chicago, Cook County and Illinois with fewer COVID-19 mandates.
“And who gets hurt the most? It’s the bartenders, it’s the waitstaff,
it’s the dishwasher, it’s anyone who relies on tips from travelers,”
Morrison said.
State Rep. Chris Bos, R-Lake Zurich, said people are already choosing a
Lake County restaurant over one in Cook County.
“We have to acknowledge that this mandate is a step too far and the data
we’ve seen out of New York City supports that too,” Bos said. “These
mandates don’t work.”
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Chicago Department of Business Affairs and Consumer Protection
Commissioner Ken Meyer Tuesday talks about the vaccine mandate.
Separately, state Reps Tom Morrison, R-Palatine, Chris Bos, R-Lake
Zurich, and Marty McLaughlin, R-Barrington Hills, criticize the
mandate.
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ChicagoMayorsOffice Facebook, Greg Bishop / The Center Square
Republicans demanded to see the science and data
supporting the mandate. A spokesperson for Cook County didn't
immediately respond with such information.
State Rep. Marty McLaughlin, R-Barrington Hills, has businesses in
suburban Cook County that want to speak out, but fear retaliation.
“I find it reprehensible that you need less information to vote or
enter the country, it seems, than to go to a local pancake
restaurant in Cook County,” McLaughlin said. “I've had enough
frankly of elected officials acting as part-time epidemiologist
telling us ‘it’s either vaccine or ventilator.’”
McLaughlin said he’s not anti-vaccine, but wants
there to be attention on therapeutics too. He also said the mandate
makes no sense.
“We need to live with this virus and any future virus in a better
way,” McLaughlin said. “A person can have vaccination status, be
COVID positive, and go into any of those establishments. How does
that make any sense at all?”
Health officials do urge residents who test positive for COVID-19 or
have symptoms to stay home.
Republicans urged for discussions at the statehouse about the
ongoing management of the COVID-19 pandemic through executive action
rather than legislative action.
“We’re entering soon our third year of a 15-day experiment to
flatten the curve,” McLaughlin said. “We need to learn to live with
this virus and any future virus in a better way.”
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