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Masks, shutdowns move from temporary to long-term strategy
On March 11, when Illinois had reported 25 confirmed cases of the novel coronavirus, dozens of people filed into the Robbins Community Center, greeted by a woman who gave each a quick squirt from a bottle of hand sanitizer.
Elbow bumps replaced handshakes, and inside the building’s gymnasium the mood felt like a pep rally, with about
Earlier that day, the World Health Organization had declared COVID-19 a pandemic, but on that evening things such as wearing masks and social distancing were not yet part of the routine.
Terry Mason, at that time chief operating officer of the Cook County Department of Public Health, told the audience that public health officials were “in sort of uncharted waters” as far as how to respond.
Mason, who a month later would be
Two days later, Gov. J.B. Pritzker would order all public and private schools to close their doors, a pause that was initially thought to be temporary then extended through the end of the school year.
In the weeks and months to come residents of the south and southwest suburbs would see daily life upended in myriad ways.
Clergy at local houses of worship had to, at least early in the year, rely on Facebook and YouTube to deliver sermons. As
“It would be a stunning thing for our people to lose Easter,” said the Rev. William Corcoran, pastor at St. Elizabeth Seton in Orland Hills.
Easter wasn’t lost, but the tradition of the faithful gathering together went by the wayside.
It would be the same for annual tributes such as Memorial Day and Veterans Day, celebrations of our nation’s independence and commemorations of the 9/11 terrorist attacks.
Concerts, both indoor and outdoor, such as at Tinley Park’s amphitheater, and summer festivals that would typically draw thousands of people had to be called off. Park districts closed playgrounds and swimming pools.
With older people and those with chronic medical conditions being identified early on as being more susceptible to the virus, nursing homes and congregate care centers became hot spots for the virus.
In early May, the Illinois Department of Human Services had reported that
With older adults, particularly those with other health issues such as diabetes or high blood pressure, at higher risk of suffering severe symptoms, nonprofits such as the PLOWS Council on Aging changed operations.
The organization provides services for seniors in Palos, Lemont, Orland and Worth townships, including delivering meals on a daily basis.
At a March 9 event at Moraine Valley Community College sponsored by PLOWS and intended to provide those working in health care an insight into what was then known about the virus, Michael Ison, professor of infectious diseases at Northwestern University’s Feinberg School of Medicine, said that
There would come times, Ison said, when schools and day care centers would be forced to close, which could boost employee absences as parents have to stay home to care for children, Ison said. Businesses, he said, would need to prepare for absences by offering telecommuting where possible.
Loans helped businesses, churches
In the south and southwest suburbs, dozens of businesses and nonprofits, including doctors and dentists, liquor stores, hotels, churches and agencies such as PLOWS benefited from loans through the federal
For St. Francis of Assisi Catholic Church, collections at Sunday Mass represented the biggest source of income for the Orland Park church.
It was able to get a loan of about $160,000 which allowed the church to keep 23 employees working, including 13 full-time staff.
“We were in a very difficult situation,” the Rev. Artur Sowa, said in July.
The financial infusion allowed Sowa and others to keep the spiritual aspect of the church available, albeit in a virtual sense, to parishioners, who received calls from staff to check on them and the pastor providing online Mass.
PLOWS got a Paycheck Protection Program loan of between $350,000 and $1 million, according to the U.S. Small Business Administration, which allowed it to maintain 71 jobs. The nonprofit did not disclose the exact amount of its loan but noted that demand for its services, such as meal deliveries, were rising as many of the aged it assists were more isolated in their homes.
Remote learning and digital divide
Some school districts, many unprepared for a sudden shift of all students being taught remotely, found technology issues made them ill-prepared.
Over the summer break they
The digital divide in Dolton West School District 148 became a hurdle not all families could clear. The district serves areas of Dolton, Harvey, Riverdale and South Holland, and 91% of its 2,300 students are in low-income households, according to Superintendent Kevin Nohelty.
Matteson Elementary District 162 and Southland College Prep Charter High School in Richton Park, aided by $823,000 in federal funding, poured $1 million into technology upgrades to ensure remote learning would, as much as possible, resemble the experience in the classroom.
Those schools and District 148 opted to start the 2020-2021 school year remotely.
“I’d rather devote the dollars toward delivering robust instruction under our terms rather than reallocating those dollars to try to protect everybody while this virus is still very alive and active,” Nohelty said.
As summer gave way to fall, however, rising virus rates within their communities forced many districts to
Frustration sets in
In mid-June, frustrated at the pace of the governor’s timetable for reopening the state’s economy,
The lawsuit alleged that state-imposed restrictions ordered by Pritzker beginning in March violated the due process and equal protection clauses of the U.S. Constitution.
In an Aug. 1 ruling, a
But as coronavirus fatigue set in later in the year, owners of some southwest suburban restaurants and bars, desperate to stay afloat,
“We’ve got to support our local businesses,” said Don Smith of New Lenox. “They’re either going to open for business, or they’re going to close permanently.”
As relatively mild fall weather turned colder, and restrictions on indoor dining and bar service stuck around, some
“It’s gut-wrenching, heartbreaking and extremely difficult,” she said at the time.
Orland Park, which relies on sales tax revenue as its biggest income source, said in
It will be perhaps several months before vaccines are more widely available to the general public, with public health agencies in Cook and Will counties studying how to best distribute them. Will County recently launched an online registry where residents can log their information in a bid to get in line for the shots.