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  • Margaret Orozco pushes her bike to get tested for coronavirus...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Margaret Orozco pushes her bike to get tested for coronavirus outside Loretto Hospital in Chicago on April 27, 2020.

  • Phlebotomist Jocelyn Rios administers a drive-thru COVID-19 test in Aurora...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Phlebotomist Jocelyn Rios administers a drive-thru COVID-19 test in Aurora on Nov. 12, 2020, at a Illinois Department of Public Health test site.

  • Alexa Ruiz, 10, gets a COVID-19 test done by health...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    Alexa Ruiz, 10, gets a COVID-19 test done by health care worker Vicky Bustamante at the Esperanza Health Centers' drive-thru COVID-19 testing pod on Dec. 20, 2021, in Chicago.

  • Workers prepare signage for the start of testing at the...

    Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune

    Workers prepare signage for the start of testing at the city's COVID-19 testing site in the parking lot of Dr. Jorge Prieto Math and Science Academy in Chicago on May 18, 2020.

  • Jonathan Pierce, a member of the Illinois National Guard, right...

    Stacey Wescott/Chicago Tribune

    Jonathan Pierce, a member of the Illinois National Guard, right foreground, trains other members on proper sanitation procedures on May 21, 2020, inside of a tent where COVID-19 testing will begin the following day in Rolling Meadows. The Illinois National Guard set up its 10th testing site outside of Rolling Meadows High School in School District 214.

  • Hundreds line up at the drive-thru Illinois Department of Public...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    Hundreds line up at the drive-thru Illinois Department of Public Health COVID-19 mobile testing location Nov. 11, 2020, at the Arlington International Racecourse in Arlington Heights.

  • Cars line up as Tamira Perkins, center, and Kiara Flowers...

    Youngrae Kim / Chicago Tribune

    Cars line up as Tamira Perkins, center, and Kiara Flowers administer a COVID-19 test at a walk-up and drive -thru test site in the Evanston Township High School parking lot on Jan. 3, 2021.

  • A worker transports a self-administered COVID-19 test to a storage...

    John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune

    A worker transports a self-administered COVID-19 test to a storage container at Saucedo Scholastic Academy on Oct. 13, 2020, in Chicago.

  • Medical staff peer out from the tents outside before the...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Medical staff peer out from the tents outside before the start of coronavirus testing at the VIDA Wellness Center in Little Village on May 6, 2020.

  • Members of the COVID-19 Care team conduct coronavirus antibody testing...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Members of the COVID-19 Care team conduct coronavirus antibody testing on the public while they sit in their vehicles in the 2400 block of North Ashland Avenue in Chicago on April 22, 2020.

  • Maria Mendoza, a second grade instructor, gets tested for COVID-19...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    Maria Mendoza, a second grade instructor, gets tested for COVID-19 outside of Murphy Elementary School in Chicago on Nov. 4, 2021.

  • The Illinois National Guard drive-thru COVDI-19 testing facility in Markham...

    Zbigniew Bzdak / Chicago Tribune

    The Illinois National Guard drive-thru COVDI-19 testing facility in Markham on May 15, 2020.

  • Antoinette Ruvalcaba administers her own COVID-19 tests outside of the...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    Antoinette Ruvalcaba administers her own COVID-19 tests outside of the Chicago Teachers Union on Dec. 30, 2021, in Chicago. Waiting to collect the test and reflected in the window is Samir Anis.

  • A worker agitates a nasal swab after administering a COVID-19...

    Youngrae Kim / Chicago Tribune

    A worker agitates a nasal swab after administering a COVID-19 test at a walk-up and drive -thru test site in the Evanston Township High School parking lot in Evanston on Jan. 3, 2021.

  • Marshall Wade helps Albertine Gibson put on her personal protective...

    Youngrae Kim / Chicago Tribune

    Marshall Wade helps Albertine Gibson put on her personal protective equipment as they conduct drive-thru COVID-19 testing at CrossWinds Church in Chicago on Oct. 20, 2020.

  • A member of the medical staff at Advocate Lutheran General...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    A member of the medical staff at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital's drive-thru COVID-19 testing on March 19, 2020.

  • A worker prepares COVID-19 test kits before the opening of...

    Youngrae Kim / Chicago Tribune

    A worker prepares COVID-19 test kits before the opening of the new testing center at the Odeum Expo Center in Villa Park on Nov. 23, 2020.

  • Drive-thru COVID-19 testing at Advocate Lutheran Hospital in Park Ridge...

    E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune

    Drive-thru COVID-19 testing at Advocate Lutheran Hospital in Park Ridge on March 18, 2020.

  • Health care worker Kelshin Johnson, center, surveys the line of...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    Health care worker Kelshin Johnson, center, surveys the line of cars waiting at the COVID-19 testing center outside of Arlington International Racecourse on March 31, 2021.

  • A health care worker opens a coronavirus test kit at...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    A health care worker opens a coronavirus test kit at the Edward-Elmhurst Health drive-thru testing center March 20, 2020, in Warrenville.

  • Zul Kapadia conducts a COVID-19 test at Prism Heath Lab...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    Zul Kapadia conducts a COVID-19 test at Prism Heath Lab in Chicago on Aug. 6, 2020. It was the first day of testing at this by-appointment-only site. It's scheduled to run seven days a week from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.

  • Members of CORE, actor Sean Penn's charity, assist drivers arriving...

    Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune

    Members of CORE, actor Sean Penn's charity, assist drivers arriving for coronavirus testing as CORE runs the coronavirus test site in the parking lot of Dr. Jorge Prieto Math and Science Academy in Chicago on May 18, 2020.

  • Keila Ruiz gets her vitals taken by health care worker...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    Keila Ruiz gets her vitals taken by health care worker Jessica Gonzalez at the Epsperanza Health Centers' drive-thru COVID-19 testing pod on Dec. 20, 2021, in Chicago.

  • Phlebotomist Tatiana Young places a cotton swab into a tube...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Phlebotomist Tatiana Young places a cotton swab into a tube after administering a nasal COVID-19 test in the parking lot of Foreman Mills Shopping Center in Chicago on Oct. 19, 2020.

  • Members of the COVID-19 Care team conduct antibody testing at...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Members of the COVID-19 Care team conduct antibody testing at a station in Chicago on April 22, 2020.

  • Registered nurse Anna Reinhart collects a self-administered COVID-19 test at...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Registered nurse Anna Reinhart collects a self-administered COVID-19 test at a drive-thru testing site at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago on Oct. 20, 2020.

  • Norwegian Hospital nurses perform one of the first half-dozen coronavirus...

    Abel Uribe / Chicago Tribune

    Norwegian Hospital nurses perform one of the first half-dozen coronavirus tests on April 28, 2020.

  • People in cars line up Jan. 7, 2021 for drive-thru...

    Erin Hooley / Chicago Tribune

    People in cars line up Jan. 7, 2021 for drive-thru COVID-19 testing at Prosser Career Academy in Chicago.

  • Keila Ruiz, 12, helps her baby brother Mateo, 8 months,...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    Keila Ruiz, 12, helps her baby brother Mateo, 8 months, get tested by health care worker Vicky Bustamante at the Esperanza Health Centers' drive-thru COVID-19 testing pod on Dec. 20, 2021, in Chicago.

  • A technician speaks to people arriving for a COVID-19 test...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    A technician speaks to people arriving for a COVID-19 test on the first day of testing at Access Health Facility in Chicago's Englewood neighborhood on May 4, 2020.

  • Nicaya Rapier, from left. nephew Zachary Marshall, 6, and her...

    Youngrae Kim / Chicago Tribune

    Nicaya Rapier, from left. nephew Zachary Marshall, 6, and her mother, Yvonne Rapier, conduct self-administered COVID-19 tests at CrossWinds Church in Chicago on Oct. 20, 2020.

  • People line up to get tested for COVID-19 as a...

    Youngrae Kim / Chicago Tribune

    People line up to get tested for COVID-19 as a new testing site opens Nov. 23, 2020, at the Odeum Expo Center in Villa Park.

  • Justin Reyes administers a COVID-19 test to Maria Suarez outside...

    Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune

    Justin Reyes administers a COVID-19 test to Maria Suarez outside of Heartland Health Center in Chicago's Rogers Park neighborhood on July 10, 2020.

  • People line up in their cars at the COVID-19 testing...

    E. Jason Wambsgans / Chicago Tribune

    People line up in their cars at the COVID-19 testing area at Roseland Community Hospital on April 3, 2020, in Chicago.

  • Jennifer Lindsley loads several tubes of patient samples to test...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Jennifer Lindsley loads several tubes of patient samples to test for COVID-19 at a hospital lab at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago on Oct. 20, 2020.

  • A warning sign alerts passersby as vehicles are lined up...

    John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune

    A warning sign alerts passersby as vehicles are lined up at a COVID-19 testing site at Saucedo Scholastic Academy on Oct. 13, 2020, in Chicago.

  • Personnel direct people to get tested outside a mobile COVID-19...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Personnel direct people to get tested outside a mobile COVID-19 testing site Nov. 9, 2020, at Resurrection Project in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood.

  • Jordan K. hands back his COVID-19 test to health care...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    Jordan K. hands back his COVID-19 test to health care worker Kelshin Johnson, right, at the COVID-19 testing center outside of Arlington International Racecourse on March 31, 2021, in Arlington Heights.

  • Public health commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady listens as CPS CEO...

    E. Jason Wambsgans / Chicago Tribune

    Public health commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady listens as CPS CEO Pedro Martinez updates the plan to safely return students to class after the winter break at City Hall, Dec. 30, 2021.

  • Makayla Triiplett an 8th grader at Deneen Elementary, tests for...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    Makayla Triiplett an 8th grader at Deneen Elementary, tests for COVID-19 outside of the Chicago Teachers Union on Dec. 30, 2021, in Chicago. Looking on is tester Martha Arevalo. CPS starts back to school on Monday following their holiday break.

  • Medical staff, medical students and RN's meet before the start...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Medical staff, medical students and RN's meet before the start of coronavirus testing at the VIDA Wellness Center in Little Village on May 6, 2020.

  • People line up at the COVID-19 testing area at Roseland...

    E. Jason Wambsgans / Chicago Tribune

    People line up at the COVID-19 testing area at Roseland Community Hospital on April 3, 2020, in Chicago.

  • Jeff Prokash reads "White Pine" while waiting in line for...

    Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune

    Jeff Prokash reads "White Pine" while waiting in line for a COVID-19 test in the Kilbourn Park neighborhood on Dec. 22, 2021 in Chicago.

  • Personnel direct people to get tested outside a mobile COVID-19...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Personnel direct people to get tested outside a mobile COVID-19 testing site Nov. 9, 2020, at Resurrection Project in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood.

  • Paca Kujtim of Arlington Heights self-administers a COVID-19 test in...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    Paca Kujtim of Arlington Heights self-administers a COVID-19 test in his car at the Arlington International Racecourse on March 31, 2021, in Arlington Heights.

  • A man holds a sealed COVID-19 test kit before having...

    John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune

    A man holds a sealed COVID-19 test kit before having it administered at Saucedo Scholastic Academy, 2850 W. 24th Blvd., on Oct. 13, 2020, in Chicago.

  • Medical assistant Nancy Avitia walks to a vehicle before administering...

    Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune

    Medical assistant Nancy Avitia walks to a vehicle before administering a drive-thru COVID-19 test outside Innovative Express Care on March 24, 2020.

  • A person uses a swab at the Illinois National Guard...

    Zbigniew Bzdak / Chicago Tribune

    A person uses a swab at the Illinois National Guard drive-thru COVID-19 testing facility in Markham on Friday, May 15, 2020.

  • Traffic is directed at the crowded Illinois Department of Public...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Traffic is directed at the crowded Illinois Department of Public Health drive-thru COVID-19 test site in Wheaton on Nov. 12, 2020

  • Workers give instructions and collect the swab kits in a...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    Workers give instructions and collect the swab kits in a drive-through line for COVID-19 testing on July 8, 2020 in the parking lot of Dr. Jorge Prieto Math and Science Academy in Belmont Cragin, one of the city's free test sites.

  • Dozens of people wait in line to get tested outside...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Dozens of people wait in line to get tested outside a mobile COVID-19 testing site Nov. 9, 2020, at Resurrection Project in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood.

  • Tamira Perkins administers a COVID-19 test at a walk-up and...

    Youngrae Kim / Chicago Tribune

    Tamira Perkins administers a COVID-19 test at a walk-up and drive -thru test site in the Evanston Township High School parking lot on Jan. 3, 2021.

  • Victoria Mandujano, 9, right, answers questions after she gets tested...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    Victoria Mandujano, 9, right, answers questions after she gets tested for COVID-19 by Kacey Dayton, a physician assistant, as her sisters Anjelica Mandujano, 15, left, and Amanda Mandujano, 11, look on May 5, 2021, at a drive-thru and walk-up test site at Esperanza Health Centers in Chicago.

  • A worker administers a COVID-19 test at the Odeum Expo...

    Youngrae Kim / Chicago Tribune

    A worker administers a COVID-19 test at the Odeum Expo Center in Villa Park in DuPage County on Nov. 23, 2020.

  • Chicago Department of Health tests and individual outside Vaughn Occupational...

    E. Jason Wambsgans / Chicago Tribune

    Chicago Department of Health tests and individual outside Vaughn Occupational High School in the Portage Park neighborhood on March 9, 2020. Students and staff at the CPS school are being asked to stay at home after a classroom assistant tested positive with coronavirus.

  • CTU workers direct vehicles lined up for COVID-19 testing outside...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    CTU workers direct vehicles lined up for COVID-19 testing outside of the Chicago Teachers Union on Dec. 30, 2021, in Chicago. CPS starts back to school on Monday following their holiday break.

  • A patient is tested as hundreds line up at the...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    A patient is tested as hundreds line up at the drive-thru COVID-19 mobile testing location Nov. 11, 2020, at the Arlington International Racecourse in Arlington Heights.

  • Registered nurse Guadalupe Duran administers a free COVID-19 test to...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Registered nurse Guadalupe Duran administers a free COVID-19 test to Salvador Santana at a walk-up and drive -thru test site in a parking lot at 6705 South Wentworth Ave. in Chicago, Nov. 6, 2020.

  • Dozens of people wait in line to get tested outside...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Dozens of people wait in line to get tested outside a mobile COVID-19 testing site Nov. 9, 2020, at Resurrection Project in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood.

  • Members of the Illinois National Guard work at the COVID-19...

    Zbigniew Bzdak / Chicago Tribune

    Members of the Illinois National Guard work at the COVID-19 test site at South Suburban College in South Holland on July 2, 2020.

  • Shelley Gavin, 55, gets a free COVID-19 test provided by...

    Zbigniew Bzdak / Chicago Tribune

    Shelley Gavin, 55, gets a free COVID-19 test provided by Community Organized Relief Effort at I Grow Chicago in West Englewood on Aug. 31, 2020.

  • Medical personnel at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge...

    Jose M. Osorio/Chicago Tribune

    Medical personnel at Advocate Lutheran General Hospital in Park Ridge wait for patients as they conduct drive-thru COVID-19 testing on March 19, 2020. The Chicago-area hospital system Advocate Aurora Health announced March 20 that it has suspended its drive-up coronavirus testing sites because of a national shortage of test kits and processing materials.

  • Samyah Sanders and Khyriah Jordan get nasal swabs for rapid...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    Samyah Sanders and Khyriah Jordan get nasal swabs for rapid COVID-19 tests on Dec. 30, 2021 at a testing station along Cottage Grove Avenue in Chatham before returning to school next week.

  • Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

  • People cough into their elbows as instructed while conducting self...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    People cough into their elbows as instructed while conducting self COVID-19 test at Harrison Park in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood on July 24, 2020.

  • Brenda Ponce is tested for COVID-19 by Kacey Dayton at...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    Brenda Ponce is tested for COVID-19 by Kacey Dayton at a drive-thru and walk-up test site at Esperanza Health Centers in Chicago on May 5, 2021.

  • Workers wears protective face masks and gowns at the entrance...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Workers wears protective face masks and gowns at the entrance to a COVID-19 mobile testing site outside Metropolitan Family Services, in the 6400 block of South Kedzie Avenue, Dec. 2, 2020, in Chicago.

  • Erika Cardoza, 22 , Gustavo Martinez, 22, and their son...

    Zbigniew Bzdak / Chicago Tribune

    Erika Cardoza, 22 , Gustavo Martinez, 22, and their son Eli, 3, get free COVID-19 tests provided by Community Organized Relief Effort at I Grow Chicago in West Englewood, Aug. 31, 2020.

  • Medical assistant Leticia Feliz administers a drive-thru test for COVID-19...

    Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune

    Medical assistant Leticia Feliz administers a drive-thru test for COVID-19 at Innovative Express Care on Chicago's North Side on March 24, 2020.

  • Pfc. Sabine Gonzalez verifies the identification and personal information of...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    Pfc. Sabine Gonzalez verifies the identification and personal information of a first responder on March 26, 2020 at the Illinois National Guard coronavirus testing facility on the Northwest Side.

  • Keila Ruiz gets her temperature taken by health care worker...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    Keila Ruiz gets her temperature taken by health care worker Jessica Gonzalez at the Epsperanza Health Centers' drive-thru COVID-19 testing pod on Dec. 20, 2021, in Chicago.

  • A man disinfects equipment at a COVID-19 testing center at...

    E. Jason Wambsgans / Chicago Tribune

    A man disinfects equipment at a COVID-19 testing center at Roseland Community Hospita on April 3, 2020.

  • Emergency room nurse Korrine Potter enters the tent that Edward...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    Emergency room nurse Korrine Potter enters the tent that Edward Hospital built in order to test possible coronavirus patients on March 17, 2020, in Naperville. Potter, along with emergency room Dr. Peter Schubel, tested six patients for coronavirus that morning.

  • Patricia Pierce swabs her nose at the Illinois Department of...

    Terrence Antonio James / Chicago Tribune

    Patricia Pierce swabs her nose at the Illinois Department of Public Health COVID-19 testing site on West 79th Street in Chicago on Nov. 5, 2020.

  • Chicago police control traffic for a line of cars waiting...

    Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune

    Chicago police control traffic for a line of cars waiting while the Illinois National Guard runs a coronavirus testing site for first responders on March 23, 2020.

  • Carolyn Smith watches as Anthony Smith gets a nasal swab...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    Carolyn Smith watches as Anthony Smith gets a nasal swab for a rapid COVID-19 test on Dec. 30, 2021 at a testing station along South Cottage Grove Avenue in Chatham.

  • Jorge Mandujano, 3, is held by his sister, Anjelica Mandujano,...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    Jorge Mandujano, 3, is held by his sister, Anjelica Mandujano, 15, while being tested for COVID-19 on May 5, 2021, at Esperanza Health Centers in Chicago.

  • A health care worker waits for a patient at an...

    E. Jason Wambsgans / Chicago Tribune

    A health care worker waits for a patient at an outdoor COVID-19 testing center at Roseland Community Hospital, April 3, 2020.

  • People line up in their vehicles for COVID-19 testing outside...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    People line up in their vehicles for COVID-19 testing outside of the Chicago Teachers Union on Dec. 30, 2021, in Chicago.

  • A worker packages a COVID-19 test swab from a client...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    A worker packages a COVID-19 test swab from a client at Prism Heath Lab, 2322 W. Peterson Ave., in Chicago, on Aug. 6, 2020.

  • Contactless drive-through COVID-19 testing is conducted in a parking lot...

    Brian Cassella / Chicago Tribune

    Contactless drive-through COVID-19 testing is conducted in a parking lot at 1606 N. Mobile Avenue in Chicago on April 23, 2020.

  • Cars line up at a new COVID-19 testing site in...

    E. Jason Wambsgans / Chicago Tribune

    Cars line up at a new COVID-19 testing site in employee parking lot B at Midway International Airport, Nov. 24, 2020.

  • Justin Reyes carries a sample after administering a COVID-19 test...

    Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune

    Justin Reyes carries a sample after administering a COVID-19 test outside of Heartland Health Center in Chicago's Rogers Park neighborhood on July 10, 2020.

  • People wait for COVID-19 rapid test results before heading to...

    John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune

    People wait for COVID-19 rapid test results before heading to Lollapalooza at a temporary testing site in the 200 block of South State Street on July 30, 2021, in Chicago.

  • Registered Nurse Lupe Duran, of Family Christian Health Center, administers...

    Terrence Antonio James / Chicago Tribune

    Registered Nurse Lupe Duran, of Family Christian Health Center, administers a free COVID-19 test outside Apostolic Faith Church, Aug. 26, 2020 in Chicago.

  • Lollapalooza concertgoers walk past a temporary COVID-19 rapid test site...

    John J. Kim / Chicago Tribune

    Lollapalooza concertgoers walk past a temporary COVID-19 rapid test site in the 200 block of South State Street on July 30, 2021, in Chicago.

  • People space themselves out as they participate in walk up...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    People space themselves out as they participate in walk up testing for coronavirus outside Loretto Hospital in Chicago on April 27, 2020.

  • People line up outside Howard Brown Health on East 55th...

    Terrence Antonio James/Chicago Tribune

    People line up outside Howard Brown Health on East 55th Street at Lake Park Avenue in Chicago to get tested for the COVID-19 virus on Dec. 22, 2021.

  • A COVID-19 tester retrieves mouth swab samples from a people...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    A COVID-19 tester retrieves mouth swab samples from a people who received free tests at Harrison Park in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood, July 24, 2020.

  • Dr. Kyle Ross hands a COVID-19 test through the window...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    Dr. Kyle Ross hands a COVID-19 test through the window of an RV at a rapid testing location in the parking lot of First Presbyterian Church, Nov. 18, 2020, in River Forest.

  • Broadway Medical staff set up to test teachers and staff...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    Broadway Medical staff set up to test teachers and staff for COVID-19 outside of Murphy Elementary School in Chicago on, Nov. 4, 2021.

  • People use a walk-up area at a new COVID-19 testing...

    E. Jason Wambsgans / Chicago Tribune

    People use a walk-up area at a new COVID-19 testing site in employee parking lot B at Midway International Airport, Nov. 24, 2020.

  • Dozens of people wait in line to get tested for...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Dozens of people wait in line to get tested for the coronavirus outside Loretto Hospital in Chicago on April 27, 2020.

  • Workers package a COVID-19 test swab from a client at...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    Workers package a COVID-19 test swab from a client at Prism Heath Lab, 2322 W. Peterson Ave., in Chicago, on Aug. 6, 2020.

  • Dozens line up for free mouth swab COVID-19 tests at...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Dozens line up for free mouth swab COVID-19 tests at Harrison Park in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood on July 24, 2020.

  • Medical technologist Patricia Mangan tests patient samples for COVID-19 in...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Medical technologist Patricia Mangan tests patient samples for COVID-19 in a lab at Rush University Medical Center in Chicago on Oct. 20, 2020.

  • Phlebotomist Tina Novick returns a sample after taking a COVID-19...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Phlebotomist Tina Novick returns a sample after taking a COVID-19 test at the Illinois Department of Public Health drive-thru site in Aurora on Nov. 12, 2020.

  • Marisa Massey of Elmwood Park grimaces as Dr. Kyle Ross...

    Stacey Wescott / Chicago Tribune

    Marisa Massey of Elmwood Park grimaces as Dr. Kyle Ross gives her a rapid COVID-19 test in the parking lot of First Presbyterian Church on Nov. 18, 2020, in River Forest. Event Medical Solutions is conducting the testing, which allows people to get results within one or two hours.

  • Dozens of people wait in line to get tested outside...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Dozens of people wait in line to get tested outside a mobile COVID-19 testing site Nov. 9, 2020, at Resurrection Project in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood.

  • Tech. Sgt. Nicholas Bobzin takes personal information from a client...

    Zbigniew Bzdak / Chicago Tribune

    Tech. Sgt. Nicholas Bobzin takes personal information from a client at the Illinois National Guard drive-thru COVID-19 testing facility at the state emissions testing site in Markham on May 15, 2020.

  • Nicaya Rapier, left, helps her nephew, Zachary Marshall, receive a...

    Youngrae Kim / Chicago Tribune

    Nicaya Rapier, left, helps her nephew, Zachary Marshall, receive a self-administered COVID-19 test from Alexandria Jackson at CrossWinds Church in Chicago on Oct. 20, 2020.

  • Medical assistant Leticia Feliz gives a test for COVID-19 outside...

    Chris Sweda / Chicago Tribune

    Medical assistant Leticia Feliz gives a test for COVID-19 outside Innovative Express Care on Chicago's North Side on March 24, 2020.

  • Trauma program manager Jennifer Homan packages a swab to be...

    Kyle Telechan / Post-Tribune

    Trauma program manager Jennifer Homan packages a swab to be sent for testing as drive-thru COVID-19 tests are performed at Franciscan Health Crown Point on March 17, 2020.

  • Dozens of people wait in line to get tested outside...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Dozens of people wait in line to get tested outside a mobile COVID-19 testing site Nov. 9, 2020, at Resurrection Project in Chicago's Pilsen neighborhood.

  • Helena Coleman, foreground, and Renea Walker take their self-administered COVID-19...

    Terrence Antonio James / Chicago Tribune

    Helena Coleman, foreground, and Renea Walker take their self-administered COVID-19 tests at the Illinois Department of Public Health testing site on West 79th Street in Chicago on Nov. 5, 2020.

  • An antibody test is performed on a driver at a...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    An antibody test is performed on a driver at a testing station in the 2400 block of North Ashland Avenue in Chicago on April 22, 2020.

  • The Illinois National Guard runs a coronavirus testing site for...

    Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune

    The Illinois National Guard runs a coronavirus testing site for first responders March 23, 2020, at a former vehicle emissions facility on the Northwest Side.

  • An aerial view of the Illinois National Guard drive-thru COVID-19...

    Zbigniew Bzdak / Chicago Tribune

    An aerial view of the Illinois National Guard drive-thru COVID-19 testing facility on the state emissions testing site in Markham on May 15, 2020.

  • People wait in line for a COVID-19 test in the...

    Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune

    People wait in line for a COVID-19 test in the Kilbourn Park neighborhood on Dec. 22, 2021 in Chicago.

  • A line of cars snakes to a drive-thru COVID-19 testing...

    Erin Hooley / Chicago Tribune

    A line of cars snakes to a drive-thru COVID-19 testing site Jan. 7, 2021, at Prosser Career Academy in Chicago.

  • A man is tested for the coronavirus outside Loretto Hospital...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    A man is tested for the coronavirus outside Loretto Hospital in Chicago on April 27, 2020.

  • People wait in line for a COVID-19 test in the...

    Armando L. Sanchez / Chicago Tribune

    People wait in line for a COVID-19 test in the Kilbourn Park neighborhood on Dec. 22, 2021, in Chicago. Illinois public health officials reported 16,581 new COVID cases and 66 deaths Wednesday.

  • Free COVID-19 testing on Chicago's State Street on Oct. 10,...

    Antonio Perez / Chicago Tribune

    Free COVID-19 testing on Chicago's State Street on Oct. 10, 2021.

  • Zul Kapadia photographs a client's identification card as he conducts...

    Jose M. Osorio / Chicago Tribune

    Zul Kapadia photographs a client's identification card as he conducts COVID-19 test at Prism Heath Lab in Chicago on Aug. 6, 2020. It was the first day of testing at this by-appointment-only site. It's scheduled to run seven days a week from 8 a.m. to 1 p.m.

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Chicago Tribune
PUBLISHED: | UPDATED:

Chicago’s City Council on Tuesday approved Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s $12.8 billion “pandemic budget” for 2021. Aldermen voted 28-22 in support of Lightfoot’s $94 million property tax increase. Lightfoot’s budget also passed 29-21.

Earlier on Tuesday, Illinois health officials announced 9,469 new confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19 and 125 additional fatalities, bringing the total number of known infections in Illinois to 674,089 and the statewide confirmed death toll to 11,677 since the start of the pandemic.

Meanwhile, as COVID-19 hospitalizations have risen to unprecedented levels in Illinois and other states, the same questions from the spring surge are reemerging: Will Illinois hospitals run out of beds? And if they do, where and when?

Last week, the Pritzker administration released projections from two sets of researchers that estimated the future number of hospitalized COVID-19 patients, including those in intensive care units. These models don’t directly address when beds might run out, but a Tribune analysis of the more pessimistic projections suggests that, if trends don’t improve, all of the state’s currently available ICU beds could be in use by early December.

COVID-19 in Illinois by the numbers: Here’s a daily update on key metrics in your area

Illinois coronavirus graphs: The latest data on deaths, confirmed cases, tests and more

COVID-19 cases in Illinois by ZIP code: Search for your neighborhood

Chicago, Cook County COVID-19 stay-home advisories: Here’s what you need to know

New coronavirus restrictions: What will be open, closed, different in Illinois

Running list of Chicago-area closings and cancellations

Here’s what’s happening Tuesday with COVID-19 in the Chicago area and Illinois:

8 p.m. (update): Chicago City Council approves Lightfoot’s ‘pandemic budget’ and $94 million property tax hike

Mayor Lori Lightfoot scored a relatively narrow but important victory Tuesday as the City Council adopted her $12.8 billion budget for 2021 that relies on a property tax hike and controversial debt refinancing to help close a massive deficit.

Aldermen voted 28-22 in support of Lightfoot’s $94 million property tax increase. The mayor’s full budget also passed 29-21.

It wasn’t as decisive a margin as her 2020 spending plan got, to say nothing of the overwhelming budget wins enjoyed most years by her predecessors.

But given the unusually bad financial forecast for the city during the COVID-19 pandemic and her combative relationship with many aldermen, Lightfoot happily accepted it, saying she would celebrate like last year with a scotch, a cigar and a steak.

Read more here. —John Byrne and Gregory Pratt

5:30 p.m.: COVID-19 prompts Lake County Board to approve smaller budget, no property tax levy increase

The Lake County Board approved the budget for the 2021 fiscal year earlier this month and, for the second consecutive year, no increase to the property tax levy was included.

The $559 million spending plan is $13.4 million lower than the 2020 budget in order to make up for anticipated revenue loss caused by the impact of the coronavirus pandemic, according to officials.

Read more here. —Yadira Sanchez Olson

5:05 p.m.: 5 things to know about Lightfoot’s ‘pandemic budget’

Chicago aldermen on Tuesday narrowly approved Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s $12.8 billion “pandemic budget” for 2021, a package that will fund city government through the next fiscal year while closing a projected $1.2 billion budget deficit spurred by coronavirus pandemic-driven revenue losses to municipal coffers.

Among other things, the package includes a $94 million property tax hike, as well as increases in fees and fines. Aldermen voted 28-22 in support of Lightfoot’s property tax increase and 29-21 to pass her budget.

Here are five things to know. —Chicago Tribune staff

3:40 p.m.: Black Friday is going to look different. Here’s what to expect if you’re shopping this week.

Black Friday, the traditional kickoff to the holiday shopping season, used to draw swarms of deal-hunting shoppers to stores. This year is going to look different.

With COVID-19 cases surging, Chicago and Cook County have issued stay-at-home advisories, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has recommended shopping online for Black Friday deals and using curbside pickup.

Retailers began offering discounts earlier than ever, and several big chains say none of their deals require a trip to the store.

While 66% of consumers have already started holiday shopping, 20% plan to start during the long weekend, according to a consumer survey by Adobe Analytics.

Online sales in November are already up 32% compared with last year and online sales on Black Friday are expected to hit $10.3 billion, up nearly 40% from last year, Adobe said.

Communities also have urged consumers to support local businesses, hit especially hard during the pandemic.

Here’s what to expect at stores in the coming days. —Lauren Zumbach

3:15 p.m.: New Lenox imposes mandatory face covering law for public places

The New Lenox Village Board passed an ordinance Monday mandating face coverings in public places and laying out guidelines for indoor dining at restaurants.

The ordinance sets a minimum $100 fine for violations, though village trustees said they don’t expect police officers to be out on the lookout for people not wearing face coverings. But trustees are hopeful the ordinance will give business owners something to show customers or patrons who refuse to wear face masks.

“We are supporting businesses. Now they can blame it on us,” Mayor Tim Baldermann said.

Businesses that may be reluctant to confront customers who aren’t following regulations on face masks can show customers the ordinance and say the village requires it and violators can be fined, Baldermann said.

Baldermann, who said he doesn’t enjoy wearing a face mask, pointed to scientific studies noting face masks can help curb the spread of COVID-19. He also said the region’s numbers continue to increase and hospitals such as Silver Cross Hospital continue to see an influx of COVID-19 patients.

Read more here. —Alicia Fabbre

3:10 p.m.: Walmart shifts 6 drive-thru COVID-19 testing sites in Chicago area to curbside pickup as winter approaches

Walmart is changing six Chicago-area drive-thru coronavirus testing sites to curbside pickup in time for colder weather.

Patients have been self-administering the nasal swab tests inside their vehicle with guidance of a pharmacist. Now, patients are required to make an appointment online to pick up test kits to perform at home and ship to a Quest Diagnostics lab, which screens and processes the results.

One of the main purposes for drive-thru testing sites is to reduce interaction between those administering the test and people who may have COVID-19.

With the onset of winter and the possibility of near zero-degree weather, some health systems have said they plan to move their COVID-19 testing sites indoors to keep workers warm. Others have said they plan to add heaters to their outdoor drive-thru testing locations.

Read more here. —Abdel Jimenez

1:45 p.m.: Chicago City Council approves Lightfoot’s ‘pandemic budget’

Chicago’s City Council approved Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s $12.8 billion budget for next year.

Aldermen voted 28-22 in support of Lightfoot’s $94 million property tax increase. Lighfoot’s budget also passed 29-21.

Lightfoot’s spending plan includes a $94 million property tax hike with a provision to raise property taxes annually by an amount tied to the consumer price index. It also includes a 3-cent gas tax hike and relies on an increase in fines and fees collection, including a plan to boost revenue by ticketing residents who are caught going 6 mph over the limit by speed cameras.

In addition, Lightfoot is asking to refinance $501 million in city debt for the 2021 budget, which would provide a jolt of new revenue next year but likely cost taxpayers more down the road. Similar borrowing tactics under Mayors Richard M. Daley and Rahm Emanuel drew deep criticism, but the Lightfoot administration said the city’s current financial disaster makes such a move appropriate.

Lightfoot has spent weeks lining up the 26 votes needed to pass what she calls her “pandemic budget” through the City Council, with aldermen pushing back hardest on the property tax increase.

Read more here. —John Byrne and Gregory Pratt

1:05 p.m.: Some Catholic schools in the Chicago area will shift to remote learning after Thanksgiving

After a fall surge of coronavirus infections, more Archdiocese of Chicago Catholic schools will temporarily transition to e-learning next week.

Catholic elementary schools were scheduled to shift to remote learning for two weeks at the beginning of next year, but “escalating COVID-19 rates within the general population” prompted the Office of Catholic Schools to modify its original plan, spokesman Manuel Gonzalez said.

The decision also comes after the archdiocese surveyed stakeholders at all 162 schools in Cook and Lake counties to measure their comfort with in-person learning during the holiday season.

The survey measured parent satisfaction, preference for in-person or remote learning, and stress and workload considerations among teachers, Gonzalez said.

“The results were that 80% of the schools needed no, or minimal, alteration of our current procedures,” he said. “The other 20% were candidates for more extensive adjustments, and it is for those schools we will be constructing individual (virtual learning) plans.”

Read more here. —Javonte Anderson

12:45 p.m.: Illinois VA launches investigation of deadly coronavirus outbreak in LaSalle ahead of Senate committee hearing

The Illinois Department of Veterans’ Affairs is launching an independent investigation of a coronavirus outbreak that has torn through the state-run veterans home in LaSalle this month, infecting dozens of residents and staff members and resulting in the deaths of more than two dozen veterans.

The announcement of the probe came less than two hours before a state Senate committee was set to begin a hearing on the outbreak, which appears to have slowed over the past few days.

As of Monday, 105 residents and 95 employees at the veterans home, located just a few miles from Starved Rock State Park, had tested positive for COVID-19 since the pandemic began. All but a handful of the cases were part of the current outbreak, which was first reported to residents and families Nov. 1 when a resident who was hospitalized tested positive.

As of Tuesday, 27 veterans have died. To date, 38 residents and 76 staff have recovered, according to the state.

The coronavirus has been raging in LaSalle County outside the veterans home. As of Nov. 15, the most recent date for which figures were available, the county had 961 cases of COVID-19 per 100,000 residents, up from 390 cases per 100,000 residents on Nov. 1.

Read more here. —Dan Petrella

12:25 p.m.: As these Chicago doctors do battle in a COVID-19 unit, their friendship has become a lifeline

A few things keep Dr. Khalilah Gates and Dr. Michelle Prickett walking into Northwestern Memorial Hospital’s intensive care unit, where they treat severely ill COVID-19 patients.

A sense of duty. A passion for their profession. And their friendship, honed over more than a decade and which they’ve always counted on for shared humor that punctuates hectic, hard days in their work as pulmonary and critical care specialists.

“You dig deep and you face the ICU for another day,” Gates said, “knowing that you’ve got Prickett.”

These ICU doctors’ friendship has always been strong. But this year, it’s been a lifeline, as they work to keep each other safe and sane while treating COVID-19 patients.

Gates and Prickett share a get-it-done, no-drama mentality. Their bond was solidified by sharing stories of being born and raised in Chicago and how they chose to stay here, raise families here and practice medicine here.

Read more here. —Alison Bowen

12:05 p.m.: 9,469 new confirmed and probable COVID-19 cases, 125 additional deaths reported

Illinois health officials on Tuesday announced 9,469 new confirmed and probable cases of COVID-19 and 125 additional fatalities, bringing the total number of known infections in Illinois to 674,089 and the statewide death toll to 11,677 since the start of the pandemic. Officials also reported 97,323 new tests in the last 24 hours.

—Chicago Tribune staff

11:10 a.m.: Cubs owners would get to defer infrastructure payment under city proposal

Mayor Lori Lightfoot and Wrigleyville’s alderman on Tuesday proposed letting the Chicago Cubs put off the team’s annual $250,000 payment into a fund to pay for infrastructure upgrades around their historic North Side ballpark because the team played without fans in the seats this year due to the pandemic.

The “CubFund Project” payment would instead be made in 2024 under the ordinance Lightfoot introduced to the City Council.”

We understand they played without fans, and lots of businesses are suffering,” Ald. Tom Tunney said. “But they still have to make the payment. Instead of this year, it will be made in 2024.”

The payments are part of a 2013 deal when the Ricketts family was asking for City Council approval to undertake massive renovations around Wrigley Field.

Read more here. —John Byrne

10:45 a.m.: Our Lady of Guadalupe festival canceled because of COVID-19

Citing concerns with COVID-19, the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe on Tuesday cancelled its winter pilgrimage that every year prompted thousands in the Chicago area to brave the December cold and walk by foot to Des Plaines to pay homage to a Mexico icon of Catholicism.

The Feast of Our Lady of Guadalupe at the Shrine was originally scheduled for Dec. 11 and 12 and typically involves the participation of more than 200,000 devotees from different Chicago churches, making this area the largest celebration after Mexico City’s.

But with COVID-19 surging across Illinois, officials from the Shrine of Our Lady of Guadalupe determined keeping devotees safe wouldn’t be possible this year. Instead, they’ll be live streaming services and are encouraging people to celebrate the feast day from their own homes or their home parishes.

Read more and see a slide show of past festivals here. —Kelli Smith

10:42 a.m.: Lightfoot proposes delay of business licenses, sidewalk cafe permits expirations to help offset COVID-19 hits

The city of Chicago will delay business license and sidewalk cafe expirations and allow expanded outdoor service to continue into next year as part of a plan Mayor Lori Lightfoot introduced Tuesday to give businesses a boost during COVID-19.

Lightfoot is proposing expanding a program allowing every business and public vehicle license with expiration dates between March 15, 2020, and June 15, 2021, to extend until 2021, without the hassle of a license renewal, her office said.

Lightfoot also is proposing to allow all sidewalk cafe permits issued in 2021 the option to extend in front of a neighboring establishment and receive a 75% reduction in permit fee. Sidewalk cafe permits that are set to expire in February 2021 will be extended until June 1 without needing to renew, the mayor’s office said.

In addition, Lightfoot’s proposal will continue allowing outdoor service for bars and restaurants in private parking lots, on the sidewalk or in closed streets as part of her Expanded Outdoor Dining Program.

Read more here. —Gregory Pratt

9:05 a.m.: An early coronavirus mutation may have made the pandemic more difficult to stop, new evidence suggests

As the coronavirus swept across the world, it picked up random alterations to its genetic sequence. Like meaningless typos in a script, most of those mutations made no difference in how the virus behaved.

But one mutation near the beginning of the pandemic did make a difference, multiple new findings suggest, helping the virus spread more easily from person to person and making the pandemic harder to stop.

The mutation, known as 614G, was first spotted in eastern China in January and then spread quickly throughout Europe and New York City. Within months, the variant took over much of the world, displacing other variants.

For months, scientists have been fiercely debating why. Researchers at Los Alamos National Laboratory argued in May that the variant had probably evolved the ability to infect people more efficiently. Many were skeptical, arguing that the variant may have been simply lucky, appearing more often by chance in large epidemics, like Northern Italy’s, that seeded outbreaks elsewhere.

But a host of new research — including close genetic analysis of outbreaks and lab work with hamsters and human lung tissue — has supported the view that the mutated virus did in fact have a distinct advantage, infecting people more easily than the original variant detected in Wuhan, China.

Read more here. —The New York Times

9:03 a.m.: Waukegan factory churns out germ-zapping robots that kill COVID-19 virus in hospitals, hotels and on ‘Chicago Med’

In the ongoing battle against the COVID-19 pandemic, add the names of Mark, Rowan, Dorian and Jabba to the list of front-line heroes quietly toiling away to vanquish the virus.

The four are germ-zapping robots, recruited by Northwest Community Hospital in Arlington Heights to do one job: kill the virus and other pathogens by sweeping rooms with pulsating beams of high-intensity UV light.

Last month, the 31/2-foot-tall robots, which bear a striking resemblance to R2-D2, the plucky droid from “Star Wars,” disinfected nearly 700 rooms at the hospital.

“Every COVID room gets treated when the patient is discharged,” said Kris York, director of hospitality services at the hospital. “The robots didn’t get much of a break.”

The four are part of a growing army of LightStrike robots, $125,000-a-pop machines that fire powerful UV blasts at surfaces where SARS-CoV-2, the virus that causes COVID-19, may be lurking.

There is such great demand for their services that Xenex, the Texas-based company behind the robots, announced a $20 million deal last month with aerospace manufacturer Astronics to build hundreds of them at a Waukegan factory.

Read more here. —Robert Channick

9 a.m.: Starting next year, international flyers may need proof of COVID-19 vaccinations

International air travel could come booming back next year but with a new rule: Travelers to certain countries must be vaccinated against the coronavirus before they can fly.

Encouraging news about vaccine development has given airlines and nations hope they may soon be able to revive suspended flight routes and dust off lucrative tourism plans. But countries in Asia and the Pacific, in particular, are determined not to let their hard-won gains against the virus evaporate.

In Australia, the boss of Qantas, the country’s largest airline, said that once a virus vaccine becomes widely available, his carrier will likely require passengers use it before they can travel abroad or land in Australia.

Qantas Chief Executive Alan Joyce said he’s been talking to his counterparts at other airlines around the world about the possibility of a “vaccination passport” for international travelers.

Read more here. —Associated Press

7:15 a.m.: Lightfoot to introduce measures to extend COVID-19 regulation changes

Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s administration planned to introduce measures at Tuesday’s City Council meeting to “extend critical regulatory relief measures for businesses” affected by the coronavirus pandemic, according to a release from the mayor’s office.

The City Council was scheduled Tuesday to vote on Lightfoot’s $12.8 billion “pandemic budget,” which includes a $94 million property tax increase.

Among the measures being introduced are ” delaying business and public vehicle license expiration dates until July 15, 2021, expanding critical sidewalk café reforms to last throughout the 2021 café season and extending” the city’s expanded outdoor dining program through the end of 2021, according to a news release from the mayor’s office.

Monday, the City Council capped “third-party delivery fees,” holding fees for delivery at 10 percent of purchase prices and total fees to restaurants at 15 percent, according to the release. — Chicago Tribune staff

6 a.m.: Will Illinois run out of hospital beds? Available data suggests a grim winter if trends don’t change.

The city of Tulsa, Oklahoma, briefly ran out of intensive care beds earlier this month. For a time, just 11 ICU beds were free across all of North Dakota. And last week, availability in some parts of Minnesota was down to single digits.

In Illinois, the state health director warned last week that some hospitals have already reported running low on beds amid the state’s second massive COVID-19 surge.

“We are not at the point where we are going to have anybody just flailing in the hallway because we can’t get them a bed … (but) that is a real possibility,” Dr. Ngozi Ezike told reporters Friday. “That has happened in other parts of this country, in other parts of this world. We’re not going to let that happen in Illinois, but it takes all of us to make sure that that doesn’t happen.”

As COVID-19 hospitalizations have risen to unprecedented levels in Illinois and other states, the same questions from the spring surge are reemerging: Will Illinois hospitals run out of beds? And if they do, where and when?

Last week, the Pritzker administration released projections from two sets of researchers that estimated the future number of hospitalized COVID-19 patients, including those in intensive care units. These models don’t directly address when beds might run out, but a Tribune analysis of the more pessimistic projections suggests that, if trends don’t improve, all of the state’s currently available ICU beds could be in use by early December.

Read more here. —Joe Mahr, Lisa Schencker

6 a.m.: Local chefs have been cooking for those in need since the pandemic began. Now with holidays approaching, donations are down.

When the COVID-19 pandemic began last spring, Evanston area chefs answered the call to feed those who were suddenly low on money or food as a result of the economic hardships that came with the quickly-spreading disease.

As cases surge again this fall, those same organizations said they are answering more and more calls for help. But this time, the money that previously sustained their efforts is drying up.

That leaves many organizations planning Thanksgiving dinners, but wondering what will happen after the holiday ends.

“In the past two weeks we have picked up a substantial amount of seniors and families,” said Evanston’s Chef Q. Ibraheem, who owns her own catering business. “I don’t know what happened in the past 12 days. But every single day my phone, especially seniors, my phone has just been ringing.”

Since March, she has served more than 20,000 meals to those in need, free of charge. Her efforts, however, have run into an unpleasant reality. On Nov. 13, “I found out that my funding was cut 50%,” Ibraheem said.

Ibraheem, whose meals especially cater to healthy food for intergenerational families with school-age children, is not the only organization taking a hit.

At Evanston-based Meals on Wheels Northeastern Illinois, Executive Director Debi Morganfield said they’re experiencing the same spike in demand, but without the additional donations that aided the organization when COVID-19 first struck.

Read more here. —Genevieve Bookwalter

Breaking coronavirus news

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In case you missed it

Here are some recent stories related to COVID-19:

Naperville Mayor Steve Chirico, who touted a plan for local mask mandate, defended attending a large wedding in Florida.

Cook County courts go virtual after increase in state COVID-19 cases.

More than 212,000 fraudulent claims for unemployment benefits filed in Illinois, sparking concerns about identity theft.

With COVID-19 surging anew, alarms sound again for Cook County’s incarcerated.

Cafe Marie-Jeanne and The Whale among the latest Chicago restaurants closing due to the COVID-19 pandemic’s economic toll.

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