Illinois House votes to make face masks optional
Send a link to a friend
[March 09, 2022]
By GRACE KINNICUTT
Capitol News Illinois
gkinnicutt@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – The Illinois House amended
COVID-19 protocols Tuesday, lifting face covering requirements following
weeks of pushback from Republican members who sometimes refused to wear
masks and delayed the start of session on several occasions.
In a 104-1 vote, the House passed House Resolution 717 that lifted the
face mask requirement. Temperature checks when members walk into the
chamber will no longer be implemented and social distancing will not be
required.
“Let’s remove these masks together, and respect those who don’t want to
remove them,” House Speaker Emanuel ‘Chris’ Welch said. “Let’s be
considerate of one another, and let’s go to work.”
The sole dissenter on the change was Rep. Lakesia Collins, D-Chicago,
who was the Democrat that motioned to remove GOP members from the floor
on several occasions in recent weeks when they refused to comply with
the face covering requirements.
House Leader Greg Harris, D-Chicago, said the change in the House rules
can be reversed if the COVID-19 situation changes in the future.
Harris mentioned that while masks are now optional, it’s important to
respect members' wishes if they ask for masks to be worn when speaking
in close proximity to each other.
Rep. Blaine Wilhour, R-Beecher City, a vocal face covering opponent who
was one of the GOP members removed from the chamber on multiple
occasions recently, said the chamber has gotten “real good at taking
meaningless votes on masks” the past few weeks instead of “doing the
work of the people.”
GOP members accused Democrats of hypocrisy for enforcing mask
requirements on the House floor in February but not at fundraising
events, and they faulted the majority party for not voting on the
governor’s authority to issue statewide mask mandates.
Rep. Tim Butler, R-Springfield, said as a separate branch of government,
they should have made decisions regarding COVID-19 protocols themselves
instead of relying on the governor’s executive order requiring masks in
crowded, indoor spaces.
“I hope moving forward we don’t institute in our own rules, which we
constitutionally have the ability to make our own rules, we don’t cede
our authority as the legislative branch to do something the governor
does,” Butler said.
[to top of second column]
|
Democratic lawmakers are pictured on the House floor
Tuesday after masks were made optional through a vote on House
rules. (Capitol News Illinois photo by Grace Kinnicutt)
House committee hearings will continue to be remote and hybrid, while
the public gallery overlooking the House floor will remain open at 50
percent capacity.
The Senate will no longer mandate masks either, although masks are
“strongly encouraged” in the chamber. A negative COVID-19 test was also
still required to gain entry to Senate offices, committee rooms and
press boxes as of Tuesday as well.
The Senate gallery was open at 50 percent capacity as of Tuesday, but
wristbands showing that the person had a negative COVID-19 test were
needed to gain entry into the gallery and other Senate areas.
The move comes as Democrats including Welch and Gov. JB Pritzker were
seen maskless while cajoling crowds in Springfield after filing their
reelection petitions at the Illinois State Board of Elections Monday.
Illinois’ mask mandate was lifted for indoor public spaces at the end of
February. Masks are still required in health care settings and on public
transportation such as buses, trains, and airplanes.
On Friday, the most recent COVID-19 executive order filed by Pritzker
ended mask requirements in schools, “shifting schools back to the
ordinary processes for handling infectious diseases,” according to a
news release.
That’s in line with U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
guidelines, the governor’s office said in a news release.
“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,” the
governor’s office said in the release.
The CDC and Illinois Department of Public Health still recommend
students, teachers and staff stay home when they have a confirmed case
or symptoms of COVID-19 or other infectious illness. Schools should
advise close contacts to stay home as well, per the release.
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.
|