Pritzker Warns Tighter Restrictions May Be Coming
More COVID-19 restrictions may be in the future for Illinoisans.
During his daily news briefing on Thursday, Gov. J.B Pritzker said his administration may implement new, more stringent restrictions statewide if virus numbers continue to increase.
“If the numbers keep going in the wrong direction, we will need to impose further mitigations,” Pritzker said. “I think we all remember what Phase 3 looked like, or Phase 2 looked like. Those are all things that are under consideration.”
In Phase 2, Illinoisans were under a stay-at-home order with all non-essential businesses closed.
The governor has already prohibited indoor service at bars and restaurants in all regions of the state, but some business owners are staying open in an effort to stay afloat and some local leaders have said they won’t intervene. Pritzker said he was aware of the problems and put the blame on local leaders.
“They know if there was enforcement – if there were actual consequences for their actions at the local level,” Pritzker said. “They are supposed to enforce state laws, and when they don’t enforce them, people die.”
The Illinois Department of Public Health reported in the last week that the state has seen its case positivity rate climb from 6.9 percent to 9.1 percent. (Wabash County is now at 15.1% positivity). The number of hospitalizations in the state has more than doubled in less than five weeks.
"If Illinoisans don’t change their behavior we are going to experience a surge in hospitalizations much greater than we are seeing now,” Pritzker said.
The governor also said that Illinois has passed a grim milestone. After the largest single-day increase in deaths since early June, Illinois surpassed more than 10,000 deaths since the start of the pandemic.
The state also shattered the single-day record for new cases of COVID-19 with 9,935. The previous high was 7,899 reported less than a week ago on Oct. 31. That brings the 7-day average of cases in the state to more than 7,400.