

The number of Illinois residents who have been fully vaccinated - receiving both of the required two shots - reached 619,480, or 4.86% of the total population, health officials said.Illinois expects to begin administering an average of 100,000 doses per day by mid-March, Gov. Llinois administered 55,947 coronavirus vaccine doses Tuesday, reaching a statewide total of 2,310,929, public health officials reported Wednesday. Pritzker says Illinois expects 100K daily doses by next month

Robert Channick 2:09 p.m.: As Illinois surpasses 2.3M COVID-19 vaccinations, Gov. “I’m not ungrateful, but the $1,000 didn’t go very far.” “I’m glad somebody saw the light somewhere,” said Wright, 59, who lives in the Englewood neighborhood on Chicago’s South Side.

#Covid illinois 1b driver
When President Joe Biden announced changes this week to the Paycheck Protection Program designed to provide more equitable relief to smaller and minority-owned businesses, the benefits quickly made a difference for Barbara Wright.Ī high school teacher whose $30,000-a-year side gig as a Lyft driver was stalled by the pandemic, Wright learned Tuesday she was now eligible for a $6,336 forgivable PPP loan - a nearly sixfold increase over the $1,085 she received through the program last year. Lisa Schencker 3:03 p.m.: PPP changes already helping small minority-owned Chicago businesses land loans The hospital declined to comment on the citation Wednesday because it is contesting it, Gus Lopez, hospital vice president of human resources and labor relations, said in an email. They also found that the hospital did not perform tests from June 9 to July 28 to make sure all the types of respirators that employees used on the job correctly fit their faces. OSHA inspectors found that the hospital did not develop and implement a written respiratory protection program in the time period they were examining. Jeremy Gorner and Annie Sweeney 4:40 p.m.: Chicago hospital cited by feds for COVID-19-related safety issuesĬommunity First Medical Center in Portage Park is contesting a citation and $13,494 penalty issued by the federal Occupational Safety and Health Administration in December related to COVID-19 safety. The investigations included an anonymous allegation that the gathering was held for Sanchez. The bar was ticketed after city officials learned more than 40 people, a maskless group that apparently included Chicago police officers, gathered in the bar’s back room, according to city records. 7 gathering at Guide’s Sports Club, 5544 S. Sanchez’s departure comes during an ongoing investigation by the department’s Bureau of Internal Affairs into a Jan. Sanchez could not immediately be reached for comment. He was rehired by the department as a civilian late last year to lead the unit after retiring in the fall as its commander.Ī department spokesman confirmed Sanchez’s resignation on Wednesday but didn’t give a reason for it. Sanchez stepped down as the Chicago police’s deputy director of gang investigations, officials said.

Lisa Schencker 4:50 p.m.: Chicago police official resigns amid investigation of bar party that led to citations for COVID-19 safety violationsĪ high-ranking Chicago police official resigned from the department Wednesday, weeks after an investigation began into a bar party allegedly held for him which led to the business being cited for violating COVID-19 safety measures. 25.īut most Chicago-area health departments are not on-board with that plan, saying they don’t have nearly enough vaccine doses to expand by Thursday. 10 that he planned to expand vaccination phase 1b - which includes seniors and front-line essential workers - to include younger people with certain health issues, starting Feb. Illinois is expanding COVID-19 vaccine eligibility to people under age 65 with health conditions Thursday, but it likely will be difficult for Chicago-area residents to find shots in coming days. Jessica Villagomez 5:55 p.m.: Illinois begins offering COVID-19 vaccine to people with health conditions Thursday, but most Chicago-area counties will not. “I believe every teacher deserves a vaccine.” “Our teachers and staff have worked since last summer to provide in-person learning,” said Donna Iglar, the school nurse who arranged the event. The vaccines were administered by Jewel-Osco pharmacists. In an effort to vaccinate teachers and staff within the Chicago Archdiocese school system, Our Lady of Mount Carmel Academy hosted an on-site vaccination day Wednesday afternoon.
