Schools are back to normal, Pritzker orders
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[March 05, 2022]
By Greg Bishop |
The Center Square
(The Center Square) – Illinois schools can return to
“normal operating procedures when dealing with infectious disease,”
according to an executive order Gov. J.B. Pritzker issued Friday.
“Now that the COVID-19 surge has subsided, schools and local health
departments can return to exercising their longstanding authority to
address infectious disease cases among students and staff,” Pritzker’s
office said in a statement.
Since mid-March 2020, Pritzker has issued dozens of executive orders and
consecutive 30-day disaster proclamations impacting every aspect of the
state’s economy, including public education. He said his efforts were to
slow the spread of COVID-19.
In April 2020, the governor ordered schools to halt
in-person education. Schools were allowed to return to in-person
instruction in August of 2021, but the state required children and staff
to wear masks. That was challenged by hundreds of parents who said their
due process rights to challenge quarantine orders were being violated by
the universal mandate.
Last week, after the Illinois Supreme Court declined to hear the
governor’s immediate appeal of a lower court ruling his mask, exclusion
and vaccine or testing mandates null and void, the governor reversed his
mandates on schools. He said the move was because of new guidance from
the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention that said masks were
only recommended in areas of high COVID-19 transmission.
“The CDC and [Illinois Department of Public Health] continue to strongly
recommend that students, teachers, and staff stay home when they have a
confirmed case of COVID-19 or have signs of any infectious illness,
including COVID-19,” Pritzker’s office said. “Schools should also
continue to recommend that close contacts stay home and will continue to
coordinate with their corresponding local health department to determine
whether a close contact should stay home based on CDC guidance.”
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Gov. J.B. Pritzker speaks at a news conference on Monday, Dec. 13,
2021.
Courtesy of Facebook
Earlier this week, some questioned if it was science or
polling data that brought about swift changes to Pritzker’s COVID-19
mandates.
“I think there was some polling data that came out from a major national
polling firm for the Biden administration that told the Democrats that
‘hey, these parents, these students, these business owners, they’re
concerned, they’re right to be concerned, and you better start getting
on their side because the politics are turning against you on this and
there’s gonna be a bloodbath at the polls in 2022,’” said state Rep.
Blaine Wilhour, R-Beecher City.
According to SFGate.com, a poll presented to the Democratic
Congressional Campaign Committee last month indicated “57% of voters in
competitive congressional districts agree with the statement, ‘Democrats
in Congress have taken things too far in their pandemic response,’ and
66% of self-defined ‘swing’ voters in competitive districts agree with
that statement.”
The authority of local school districts to enforce mask and exclusion
mandates on children will be the subject of a hearing in Sangamon County
on March 10. Attorney Thomas DeVore has a temporary restraining order
motion against Chicago Public Schools for their continued mask mandate.
CPS said they expect their mandate to be lifted “in the near future.”
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