Pritzker: Changes to stay-at-home order coming, but ‘normal’ a long way away
‘Mass opening’ of businesses not coming May 1, he says
By JERRY NOWICKI
Capitol News Illinois
jnowicki@capitolnewsillinois.com
SPRINGFIELD – Changes are coming to the stay-at-home order, Gov. JB Pritzker said again at his daily COVID-19 briefing Tuesday in Chicago, but it is unclear what they are and when they will happen.
More information on what models the state is using to predict a peak and what changes will be made to the order is “coming in the very near future,” Pritzker said, and many options are being considered,
“We’re looking at lots of things like that,” Pritzker said when asked about the possibility of opening golf courses. “We understand the summer is different than what we’ve had up to now, which has been colder weather. We want to consider all of those things, that’s just one of the many, many things we are trying take into consideration.”
He faced the questioning at his daily briefing hours after telling the Washington Post that he is now anticipating a mid-May peak in the number of cases of the virus in Illinois.
He predicted that smaller, later peak and said wide compliance with his stay-at-home order is the reason for the delay to what was an initial prediction of an April peak. He said that compliance has helped save lives and limit strain on the hospital system.
“We will be making some changes to the order as it is. But it is true that it is working,” he said, adding that removing it entirely would “open everything back up to infection.”
The latest peak prediction came as the state announced 119 more deaths in the past 24 hours – more than the previous two days combined – bringing total fatalities to 1,468 in Illinois. There were also 1,551 more confirmed cases, bringing the total to 33,059.
Still, Pritzker said, there won’t be any return to “normal” until the state can adequately test and track the virus, and being able to do so is not immediately on the radar.
“There isn’t enough testing and there won’t be for some time,” he said, adding “to really open everything up,” the state is “going to need a whole lot more.”
That means, Pritzker said, “we have to leave things, you know, still in a place that seems not normal for everybody and won’t be for some time.”
“But we’re going to work hard to make it more normal and make it easier for people and certainly we want people to be able to get outside and enjoy themselves,” he said.
The state has now tested 154,997 people for the virus, an increase of 6,639 from the day before as it has yet to near the administration’s goal of 10,000 daily despite claims by Pritzker last week that the state was ramping up testing and had “eliminated our supply chain problems as they relate to viral transport medium (VTM) and swabs.”
Pritzker said he would not follow Georgia’s lead as that state reopens parts of its economy Friday, and he said he would heed the advice of the federal government in taking broader action once the number of new cases and deaths has decreased for 14 straight days.
“I want to caution that there isn’t – I don’t think there’s going to be some mass opening of, you know, lots and lots and lots of businesses come May 1,” he said when asked if there would be enough hand sanitizer and cleaning supplies when businesses reopen.
Dr. Ngozi Ezike, director of the Illinois Department of Public Health, also said there is a risk of a COVID-19 resurgence in the fall if there is still no treatment or vaccine, as is expected.
“It’s very concerning that that could be a significant second wave or a second surge,” she said.