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Chicago Sun-Times
Chicago Sun-Times
Health
Sun-Times staff

Coronavirus live blog, August 25, 2020: Illinois orders stricter mask rules at bars, restaurants

Tyler LaRiviere/Sun-Times

On Tuesday, Gov. J.B. Pritzker issued a new set of guidelines for bars and restaurants Tuesday that require patrons to keep their masks over their mouths and noses during all interactions with wait staff and other food service workers.

Also, a wide swath of Chicago’s south suburbs took a step backward from their coronavirus re-openings Monday as Pritzker’s office announced tighter business restrictions in Will and Kankakee counties due to a rise in positive coronavirus tests.

Here’s what happened in the fight against the coronavirus in Chicago, the state and the nation.

News

9:15 p.m. Masks on the menu: Stricter face-covering rules at bars, restaurants under latest Pritzker guidelines

People dine outside at Wilde Bar & Restaurant as others walk along the sidewalk, Thursday, June 25, 2020.

Unless a sip or a bite is going in, the mask pretty much has to stay on.

Facing a rise in coronavirus cases statewide, Gov. J.B. Pritzker issued a new set of guidelines for bars and restaurants Tuesday that require patrons to keep their masks over their mouths and noses during all interactions with wait staff and other food service workers.

That’s “including but not limited to when employees take patrons’ orders, deliver food and beverages and service tables,” according to the Illinois Department of Public Health.

The new guidelines go into effect Wednesday and also apply to other places that serve food, including museums, entertainment venues and “indoor recreational facilities,” officials said.

“It’s important that we treat hospitality employees just as you would in any retail store or establishment,” Pritzker said at a news conference in Joliet, part of the Will-Kankakee County region that is facing a full ban on indoor dining due to a rise COVID-19 testing positivity rate.

The new mask guidelines apply statewide to both indoor and outdoor dining and bar service.

“This new requirement will help keep people safe while moving the economy forward,” the Democratic governor said.

Read reporter Mitchell Armentrout’s full story here.

8:30 p.m. New COVID-19 mandates on health care facilities get pushback

Threatening fines and funding cut-offs, the Trump administration on Tuesday issued new COVID-19 requirements for nursing homes and hospitals, prompting immediate pushback from beleaguered industries.

To check the spread of the coronavirus in nursing homes, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services announced it will require facilities to test staff regularly or face fines.

The move comes months after the White House first urged governors to test all nursing home residents and staff. With residents, nursing homes are being required to offer them coronavirus tests if there is an outbreak or if any show symptoms.

Read the full story here.

6:01 p.m. ‘Red alert’ or red-faced? Pritzker admits ‘mistake’ in different responses to COVID-19 outbreaks in south suburbs and downstate

Gov. J.B. Pritzker declared a “red alert” Tuesday for Will and Kankakee counties while issuing his coronavirus crackdown on the region due to rising COVID-19 testing positivity rates.

And as three state senators from the far south suburban region slammed what they viewed as an “inconsistent” state response, the Democratic governor acknowledged the lighter restrictions he imposed a week earlier on the similarly resurgent downstate Metro East region were a “mistake.”

“This is a red alert for everyone who works and lives here, and it demands a renewed effort to slow the spread of COVID-19,” Pritzker said at a news conference in Joliet, the seat of Will County.

Indoor dining and bar service is banned in Will and Kankakee counties beginning Wednesday, a state “mitigation” effort that’s the result of the region reporting three consecutive days with an average testing positivity rate of 8% or higher. Experts use that number to gauge how rapidly the virus is spreading.

Read the full story here.

5:36 p.m. Mayor wants designs for promoting winter outdoor dining

Deep-dish pizza in a deep freeze? Pulled pork for a polar vortex? Or maybe saganaki in a snowstorm?

Mayor Lori Lightfoot wants to introduce Chicagoans to the pleasures of winter outdoor dining. Mindful that COVID-19’s hold on the city might rule out crowded restaurant dining rooms when cold weather hits, Lightfoot announced a design competition Tuesday for ways the whole experience can be taken outside, windchills be damned.

“We are asking our community members to come together and think creatively about how we can make outdoor dining feasible in the winter,” Lightfoot said.

So the city has partnered with the design firm IDEO, the Illinois Restaurant Association and BMO Harris Bank, which is putting up a $5,000 prize for winners in each of three design categories. Two envision an outdoor structure, freestanding or attached to a building, to provide some shelter. The third category is bravely labeled “cultural shifts making winter dining more appealing.”

Read the full story here.

4:51 p.m. Organizers of canceled Chicago Marathon announce ‘virtual experience’ for runners

Runners whose hopes were dashed by the cancellation of the Chicago Marathon are being encouraged to run 26.2 miles on their own and submit their times.

Bank of America Chicago Marathon organizers announced Tuesday that anyone who’d signed up for the marathon is eligible for the “virtual marathon.”

“People will create a course in their own neighborhoods or on a treadmill and then they can submit their results and see how they track with other people participating in the experience as well,” marathon spokeswoman Alex Sawyer said.

Runners can download a “digital bib” and submit their marathon times between Oct. 6 and Oct. 11, which would have been marathon Sunday.

Read the full story here.

2:45 p.m. Experts credit masks as rate of new US coronavirus cases falls

NEW YORK — The number of Americans newly diagnosed with the coronavirus is falling — a development experts credit at least partly to increased wearing of masks — even as the outbreak continues to claim nearly 1,000 lives in the U.S. each day.

About 43,000 new cases have been reported daily over the past two weeks across the country, down 21 percent since early August, according to data compiled by Johns Hopkins University. While the U.S., India and Brazil still have the highest numbers of new cases in the world, the trend down is encouraging.

“It’s profoundly hopeful news,” said Dr. Monica Gandhi, an infectious-diseases expert at the University of California, San Francisco, who credits the American public’s growing understanding of how the virus spreads, more mask-wearing and, possibly, an increasing level of immunity.

“Hopefully all those factors are coming into play to get this virus under control in this country that’s really been battered by the pandemic,” she said.

The virus is blamed for more than 5.7 million confirmed infections and about 178,000 deaths in the U.S. Worldwide, the death toll is put at more than 810,000, with about 23.7 million cases.

Read the full story here.

12 p.m. Going south? Far south suburbs hit with restaurant, bar and other restrictions Monday to combat outbreaks linked to ‘COVID fatigue’

A wide swath of Chicago’s south suburbs took a step backward from their coronavirus re-openings Monday as Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s office announced tighter business restrictions in Will and Kankakee counties due to a rise in positive coronavirus tests.

Beginning Wednesday, bars and restaurants in the region are barred from seating customers indoors and outdoor service will be cut off at 11 p.m., under the new COVID-19 “mitigations” handed down by the Democratic governor’s office.

Party buses are banned, and casinos, which have to close by 11 p.m. as well, will be capped at 25% capacity along with most other venues. The restrictions don’t apply to schools, Pritzker’s office said.

Will and Kankakee counties were saddled with the restrictions because the region’s testing positivity rate topped 8% for three consecutive days, the threshold set by Pritzker’s health team that triggers a state intervention. Experts say the positivity rate indicates how rapidly the virus is spreading through a region.

Read reporter Mitchell Armentrout’s full story here.

9:24 a.m. Five months late and not how they envisioned it, Fire set for home opener

Fire coach Raphael Wicky had three updates Monday.

“First, the player who was confirmed positive on Friday is self-isolating,’’ Wicky said. ‘‘He continues to be asymptomatic and is in good spirits. Second, all other players and staff have continued to test negative, thankfully, and are all asymptomatic. And third, our club followed all the health, safety and medical protocols put in place by Major League Soccer. We have done so the entire time since March. We did it in Orlando in the bubble, and we continue to do it now.”

That Wicky had to make that statement is a part of life these days, especially after the Fire’s announcement late Friday night. It’s another sign that COVID-19 will loom over everything Tuesday night, when the team makes its Soldier Field return against FC Cincinnati.

The Fire were supposed to play at the lakefront March 21 against Atlanta United, but that game was postponed because of the pandemic. Instead, the Fire have had to wait five months for their Soldier Field bow, and there will be no fans in the stands because of safety reasons.

That’s not quite how the Fire envisioned their return, but the pandemic has altered all their plans.

Read Brian Sandalow’s full report here.

9:18 a.m. Vic Mensa set for Lakeshore Drive-In live show

Chicago hip-hop artist/activist Vic Mensa has dropped a seven-track EP which includes collaborations with BJ the Chicago Kid, Peter CottonTale, SAINt JHN, Eryn Allen Kane and Snoh Aalegra, among others.

On Monday, Mensa announced a COVID-friendly drive-in live performance scheduled to take place Sept. 5 at the Lakeshore Drive-In, (the Adler Planetarium’s parking lot, 1362 S. Linn White Dr.), marking his first live performance in nearly a year. Show time is 7 p.m.

A limited number of tickets, $25-$230 per car (up to four persons), are available via Universe. There is a maximum of 6 persons per car; additional ticket purchase will be required. No outside food or drink, pets permitted. Attendees under age 17 must be accompanied by a parent or legal guardian.

The all-ages event will adhere to social distancing guidelines by requiring concertgoers to park their vehicles one full space apart. All attendees must wear a mask or facial covering when outside any vehicle. Masks will also be available for purchase at the event.

“In a time when the people are hurting, we need healing,” said Mensa in a statement. “Music is medicine, and the sickness is real. I’m excited to be able to play my part.”

Read Evan Moore’s full story here.


New Cases

  • Over the last two weeks, the state has averaged 1,885 new coronavirus cases per day, more than triple the state’s running rate on June 24.
  • Chicago Fire player tests positive for COVID-19
  • More than 37,000 people have been diagnosed with the virus over the first three weeks of August, compared to 22,925 in all of June.
  • Five Notre Dame football players test positive for COVID-19.

Analysis & Commentary

9:22 a.m. A summer sports season like none we’ve seen before

One thing’s for sure: You’ve never seen a sports season like this one.

It’s late August, and last weekend you could watch four NBA playoff games in a single day?

Watch the NHL in full Stanley Cup-playoff mode?

Watch the Indianapolis 500, which usually takes place in May?

Of course, the operative word here is watch. More precisely, watch on TV, because the idea of lots of spectators — or even anybody — attending these events is something of an anachronism.

People are learning, swiftly and sadly, to stay away from each other, especially from crowds. (That is, if you’re not at a beach party in Wisconsin or with protesters boycotting Costco over its mask-wearing policy.)

A pandemic changes the world in many ways, and some of those ways will not be fully apparent until the coronavirus has been wrestled into submission.

Read Rick Telander’s full column here.

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