Skokie Shifts To Tier 2 Coronavirus Mitigation Measures

SKOKIE, IL — State public health officials have lifted some limitations on activities in Skokie with this week's downgrade of Tier 3 COVID-19 restrictions, the strictest measures to mitigate the spread of the coronavirus imposed since the stay-at-home order issued by Gov. J.B. Pritzker last March as the number of cases surged.

Skokie has entered Tier 2, which means cultural institutions, like museums, are permitted to open. Under Tier 2 coronavirus mitigation measures, gatherings of up to 10 people or less are allowed, and certain sports and group recreational activities can reopen. Sporting and fitness facilities can open with up to 25 people or 25 percent of capacity, according to state officials.

According to the village's health department, there was a 5.9 percent positivity rate for the week ending Jan. 13, the most recent data available. The seven-day moving average of new daily cases detected stood at 24.75 on Wednesday, down from 27 in the past week to reach its lowest point since Dec. 29.

On Monday, two days after announcing changes to Tier 1 restrictions that will allow indoor dining, the Pritzker administration announced modifications to the metrics it would use to determine regional reopening. State officials dropped the requirement that hospitals maintain at least 20 percent of their hospital beds outside of intensive care units staffed and empty.

Dr. Ngozi Ezike, director of the Illinois Department of Public Health, said the state has established a new surge staffing program to make sure there would be adequate hospital staff. She said hospital officials assured the Pritzker administration the 20 percent ICU availability metric would be sufficient for measuring capacity.

“We are pleased to see most of our regions move out of Tier 3 mitigations with this change, and it is critical that we maintain this progress," Ezike said in a statement. "With new variants of COVID-19 spreading, it is more important than ever to follow the public health guidance that keeps people safe – wear your mask and watch your distance.”

According to the latest hospitalization utilization numbers available from state public health officials, about 15 percent of patients in the state's hospitals had COVID-19. And as of Monday, about 10 percent of the state's hospital beds were occupied with patients with COVID-19.

Of the state's 3,320 staffed ICU beds, about 20 percent were occupied by patients with COVID-19. The state reopening metrics still include the three-day rolling average percentage of beds available in a region's ICU.

The metrics do not include any measurement of the number of new cases, known as the incidence rate.

State public health officials have included such a metric in the non-binding recommendations offered to volunteer local school board officials, who are tasked with making school reopening decisions. Most have deferred to the suggestions of their district's superintendents.

Steven Isoye, the superintendent of Niles Township High School District 219, has convened a group of administrators, union leaders, board members and public health officials to consider when to begin offering some in-person instructional options for students.

The district will not rely on the state's definition of what qualifies as "moderate community transmission" — a positivity rate below 8 percent, an incidence rate below 100 new daily cases per 100,000 people and stable or declining infection rates among young people. But it will use a related combination of metrics, some of which are non-numerical and include as-yet-undetermined measurements of staffing and substitute availability.

In addition to regional data, district officials said administrators plan to consider case data for Niles Township ZIP codes and the north suburban Cook County region, as defined by the Cook County Department of Public Health's school metrics. The most recent data available for the North Cook region showed a 22 percent decline in the number of overall cases and a 26 percent decline in youth cases compared to the prior week. The regional test positivity stood at 8.1 percent.

As of Jan. 21, the district had yet to compile data showing how many families are interested in-person instruction and how many would opt for remote.

As of Thursday, suburban Cook County, or Region 10 in the governor's reopening plan, was two additional days of average test positivity below 8 percent would allow for a move from Tier 2 to Tier 1, which would allow limited indoor dining to reopen, as well as gatherings of up to 25 people.

This article originally appeared on the Skokie Patch