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Coronavirus live blog, March 7, 2021: Illinois sees smallest daily caseload and single-day death toll in monthsSun-Times staffon March 7, 2021 at 11:00 pm

Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-Times

Here’s the latest news on how COVID-19 is impacting Chicago and Illinois.

Latest

Officials announces changes to who’s eligible for vaccines at United Center in an attempt to make distribution more equitable


Ashlee Rezin Garcia/Sun-Times

With Illinois’ historic vaccine rollout expected to kick into overdrive this week thanks to the United Center being used as the city’s largest mass vaccination site, officials on Sunday announced major changes to who’s eligible to receive shots at the Near West Side arena in an attempt to ensure doses are equitably available to the communities most impacted by the pandemic.

Starting Sunday at 4 p.m., anyone who lives in Chicago and is eligible to receive the vaccine under Phase 1B+ of the state’s distribution plan will be able to register for appointments at the United Center. This includes anyone 18 and over with underlying health conditions, as well as people 65 and older.

Officials are also setting aside appointments for Chicago residents who live in areas hardest hit by the virus and have experienced the highest rates of severe illness and death; appointments are also being set aside for community-based organizations targeting their outreach to special populations in Chicago, including people with disabilities.

Meanwhile, residents outside of Cook County will no longer be eligible for appointments at the United Center site. These decisions were made under FEMA guidance to ensure more equitable distribution of the vaccine.

Officials targeted the United Center to be a mass vaccination center for its proximity to the most vulnerable communities in the city, but more than half of the appointments snatched up over the last three days were made by people outside Chicago.

Early data indicated that only 40% of the more than 40,000 seniors who had signed up for appointments at the United Center since Thursday morning were Chicago residents.

“Equity is central to our COVID-19 strategy, and as we strive to vaccinate the entire city, our commitment to equity is more important than ever,” Mayor Lori Lightfoot said in a statement..

Read the full story from Madeline Kenney here.


News

4:56 p.m. Senate passes Biden’s $1.9T coronavirus relief bill


AP Photos
President Joe Biden speaks in the State Dining Room of the White House, Saturday, March 6, 2021, in Washington.

WASHINGTON — An exhausted Senate narrowly approved a $1.9 trillion COVID-19 relief bill Saturday as President Joe Biden and his Democratic allies notched a victory they called crucial for hoisting the country out of the pandemic and economic doldrums.

After laboring all night on a mountain of amendments — nearly all from Republicans and rejected — bleary-eyed senators approved the sprawling package on a 50-49 party-line vote. That sets up final congressional approval by the House next week so lawmakers can whisk it to Biden for his signature.

The huge measure — its total spending is nearly one-tenth the size of the entire U.S. economy — is Biden’s biggest early priority. It stands as his formula for addressing the deadly virus and a limping economy, twin crises that have afflicted the country for a year.

“This nation has suffered too much for much too long,” Biden told reporters at the White House after the vote. “And everything in this package is designed to relieve the suffering and to meet the most urgent needs of the nation, and put us in a better position to prevail.”

Saturday’s vote was also a crucial political moment for Biden and Democrats, who need nothing short of party unanimity in a 50-50 Senate they run with Vice President Kamala Harris’ tiebreaking vote. They have a slim 10-vote House edge.

Not a single Republican backed the bill in the Senate or when it initially passed the House, underscoring the barbed partisan environment that’s so far characterizing the early days of Biden’s presidency.

A small but pivotal band of moderate Democrats leveraged changes in the legislation that incensed progressives, not making it any easier for Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-Calif., to guide the measure through the House. But rejection of their first, signature bill was not an option for Democrats, who face two years of trying to run Congress with virtually no room for error.

“They feel like we do, we have to get this done,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-N.Y., said of the House. He said he’d spoken to Pelosi about the Senate’s changes and added, “It’s not going to be everything everyone wants. No bill is.”

Read the full story here.

12:15 p.m. Source: Pedro Strop away from Cubs after violating COVID-19 protocols

Right-hander Pedro Strop is away from the Cubs after violating COVID-19 protocols, according to a source. Strop will now have to isolate from the team before he is allowed to resume baseball activities at the team’s complex.

Strop was tagged in a post with Cleveland outfielder Franmil Reyes, who is also away from the team due to violating protocols, without masks in a public place. The post has since been deleted.

The Cubs didn’t have a COVID-19 protocol violation last season and were one of just eight teams who didn’t have a single player test positive for the virus during the season. Left-hander Kyle Ryan was placed on the COVID-19 list earlier this spring.

Read the full story from Russell Dorsey here.

9:19 a.m. Pritzker on losing streak with party leadership and tax battles, but COVID-19 likely to be game changer — or ender

Chalk up another loss on Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s political scoreboard.

The latest defeat — backing the losing candidate in the race to succeed Mike Madigan as chair of the Democratic Party of Illinois — has some on the sidelines questioning whether the billionaire governor is headed for a game-ending loss next year.

“It’s nice to have money, but you’ve got to make that money work for you, and you have to get some wins,” said one Illinois Democrat, who asked to remain anonymous. “He needed that win [Wednesday] night. … That never would have happened on Madigan’s watch.”

Pritzker hasn’t officially said whether he’s seeking reelection, but some Democrats see the losses, namely the thwarted move to a graduated income tax and the Wednesday night defeat, as troubling signs as he potentially gears up for a bid for a second term.

But the real game changer, of course, could be COVID-19 — and whether the governor’s response is seen as a grand slam or the final out.

The latest political hit for the governor came Wednesday, when U.S. Rep. Robin Kelly was narrowly elected Illinois Democratic chair by the 36 men and women who make up the state party’s central committee, beating Ald. Michelle Harris, 51.7% to 48.3%.

Pritzker backed the South Side alderman, and committee members said he personally lobbied on her behalf.

“I’m not going to pull any punches, and say it felt good — it’s disappointing,” said Quentin Fulks, the head of Pritzker’s political operation. “We had a preferred candidate, and they didn’t win, but at the end of the day, we are all Democrats, and the party did end up with a Black woman as chair and we are looking forward to a successful 2022 and electing Democrats up and down the ballot all across the state.”

Read the full story from Rachel Hinton here.


New Cases

  • Officials reported 2,565 new cases were diagnosed among 79,248 tests, to raise Illinois’ average positivity rate slightly to 2.4%.
  • The state also logged another 50 COVID-19 deaths, including that of a Cook County man in his 30s.

Analysis & Commentary

10:54 a.m. COVID grief: ‘Did he know I loved him?’

He liked cats and bullfights, served in the Illinois National Guard during the Vietnam War and once ran a goat farm in Arizona. He taught computer programming and worked in the reptile house of the Lincoln Park Zoo.

He was varied and contradictory, as people often are, the good ones anyway, and after he died in January of COVID-19, his wife of 40 years grasped at the air where he had been. Part of that process was to write to me. There was guilt. For nearly a year, the couple lived like monks in a cell, going out only for doctor’s visits. She thinks that’s what killed him.

“I am sure I was exposed in the waiting room of a medical office, and I brought it home,” she wrote.

Yes, he was high risk: Type A blood, overweight, diabetes, high blood pressure. Lots of people fit that description. It doesn’t mean you deserve to die.

He went to the hospital, stayed two days, but was sent home over her objection.

“I wanted him to stay,” she wrote. “Just over 24 hours later, I found him on the floor, nearly unconscious, and he was transported to the hospital by ambulance again. This time he had a pulmonary embolism and hypoxia. Three days later he was on a ventilator, and one system after another began to fail. He was removed from machines, and he died.”

Read the full column from Neil Steinberg here.

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Coronavirus live blog, March 7, 2021: Illinois sees smallest daily caseload and single-day death toll in monthsSun-Times staffon March 7, 2021 at 11:00 pm Read More »

Lucas Giolito sharp in second start, but White Sox’ bats aren’tDaryl Van Schouwenon March 7, 2021 at 11:07 pm

Lucas Giolito pitches against the Rockies during the White Sox spring training game in Glendale, Ariz., on Sunday. (John Antonoff/For the Sun-Times)

Sox’ ace says getting accustomed to group of catchers is key.

ROCKIES 1, SOX 0 (7)

Giolito sharp again

Likely Opening Day starter Lucas Giolito pitched three hitless innings, walking one and striking out two in his second consecutive crisp outing. Relievers Evan Marshall and Jimmy Cordero each worked a scoreless inning.

‘‘Lot of pitching backward today,’’ Giolito said. ‘‘Trying to get as many sliders in as I can, within reason. I was pretty happy with it.’’

Getting to know you

Giolito said getting accustomed to all his catchers is important.

‘‘A huge [thing] for me is establishing my relationship with all the catchers,’’ Giolito said. ‘‘I’ll obviously be throwing to [Yasmani Grandal, out with a sore knee] once he gets healthy again, but being prepared, having a game plan with every single catcher. Because we don’t know who’s going to win the backup role.’’

Giolito praised Yermin Mercedes’ energy and was fired up after Mercedes threw out Ryan Vilade trying to steal to end his outing.

‘‘I was putting that hand cannon, putting that pistol, back in there after he gunned that guy down,’’ Giolito said.

Blanked

Rockies right-hander German Marquez (three innings) held a Sox lineup featuring four regulars to four hits, including a double by Yoan Moncada. The Sox are 1-4-3.

Chips on shoulders

Reliever Aaron Bummer looked sharp in a perfect inning in a ‘‘B’’ game against the Dodgers. He said the entire bullpen is motivated by the Sox’ Game 3 loss in the wild-card series last season against the Athletics. It was a bullpen game and a bullpen loss.

‘‘It’s something that showed we have a lot of room to grow,’’ Bummer said. ‘‘There is a lot of talk about what this bullpen can be, but . . . it’s about what the bullpen is.’’

On deck

Sox at Dodgers, 2:05 p.m. Monday, Glendale, MLB.com, 1000-AM, Mike Wright vs. Julio Urias.

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Lucas Giolito sharp in second start, but White Sox’ bats aren’tDaryl Van Schouwenon March 7, 2021 at 11:07 pm Read More »

Loyola earns tournament bid by beating Drake in MVC finalAssociated Presson March 7, 2021 at 11:22 pm

Loyola Ramblers
Members of Loyola celebrate a 75-65 victory over Drake in the championship game of the NCAA Missouri Valley Conference men’s basketball tournament Sunday, March 7, 2021, in St. Louis. | Jeff Roberson/AP

Cameron Krutwig and Braden Norris each scored 20 points to lead the Ramblers

ST. LOUIS — Cameron Krutwig and Braden Norris scored 20 points apiece to lead No. 20 Loyola to a 75-65 win over Drake in the Missouri Valley Conference championship game Sunday for a spot in the NCAA Tournament.

The Ramblers (24-4, 16-2) will be making their seventh NCAAs appearance and first since the 2018 team reached the Final Four as a No. 11 seed.

Keith Clemons added 13 points for Loyola, which has won six in a row and 17 of its past 18.

Tremell Murphy and D.J. Wilkins scored 20 points each for Drake (25-4, 15-3), a bubble team. The Bulldogs were appearing in the MVC title game for the first time since they won the tournament in 2008. Joseph Yesufu added 12 points.

Krutwig, the MVC Player of the Year, had eight rebounds. He sent Loyola on a 7-0 run with a hook shot from the lane that broke a 24-all tie.

“We wanted to be physical without fouling,” Krutwig said. “We were all over the court.”

Krutwig was a member of that 2018 team that gained nationwide attention with its improbable run to the Final Four.

He feels as if it could happen again.

“It makes you hungry and want to get back there,” Krutwig said. “We’ll enjoy this win for one or two days then it’s right back to business. Once we find out who we’re playing, we’ll get right to it. You’ve got to fall in love with the grind — especially in March.”

Loyola coach Porter Moser says his team is ready for the challenge.

“I welcome similarities,” Moser said. “I’ve been shying away from comparing them. These guys — they’re their own team. But I love the sustained success.”

Loyola used a lock-down defensive effort in the second half to seal the win.

“It’s a culture here,” said Norris, who hit five 3-pointers. ”You have to play defense to play in this program.”

Loyola had held its opponents to 58 points or fewer in its previous 17 games before Sunday.

“They’re terrific defensively, they make everything hard,” Drake coach Darian DeVries. ”They have great hand activity, they have toughness on the ball. They’re really connected as a group.”

Clemons hit a 3-pointer midway through the second half to push the lead to a 53-37.

Both teams had 10-0 runs in the first half.

Loyola, which hit 10 of 24 shots (63%) in the opening half, won its three tournament games by a total of 50 points.

Drake won its first 18 games of the season. It was playing without regulars Roman Penn and ShanQuan Hemphill, who suffered leg injuries in February.

The Bulldogs must now wait until Selection Sunday to find out their fate.

“We did everything we could,” Wilkins. “Whatever happens, happens.”

Added Moser, (Drake) definitely belongs.”

FATHER OF ARCH MADNESS

Doug Elgin, MVC commissioner for the past 33 years, will step down in June. Elgin moved the tournament to St. Louis in 1991 and is given credit for coining the term Arch Madness. He is the longest-tenured commissioner in the 114-year history of the league.

“March Madness is what it is because of our commissioner,” Moser said.

ALL IN

The MVC is the only league in the nation that was able to complete every regular-season conference game. All 10 teams played 18 games each.

BIG PICTURE

Loyola: Heading to the NCAA Tournament for the seventh time and first since the 2018 team reached the Final Four.

Drake: Hoping for an NCAA at-large berth. The Ramblers have won 69 games over the past three seasons, tying for the most in a three-game stretch in program history.

UP NEXT

Loyola: Will be making its second NCAA Tournament appearance in the past 31 years.

Drake: Awaits a postseason invitation.

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Loyola earns tournament bid by beating Drake in MVC finalAssociated Presson March 7, 2021 at 11:22 pm Read More »

Sunday’s high school basketball scoresSun-Times Staff Reporton March 8, 2021 at 12:12 am

Geneva’s Ryan Huskey (20) controls the ball as St. Charles North’s Ethan Marlowe defends.
Geneva’s Ryan Huskey (20) controls the ball as St. Charles North’s Ethan Marlowe defends. | Allen Cunningham/For the Sun-Times

All the scores from Sunday, March 7, 2021.

Please send scores and corrections to [email protected]

Sunday, March 7, 2021

CATHOLIC BLUE

St. Rita at Mount Carmel, ppd.

DUKANE

Geneva at Batavia, 6:00

Glenbard North at Lake Park, 6:00

St. Charles East at St. Charles North, 6:00

Wheaton-Warrenville South at Wheaton North, 6:00

EAST SUBURBAN CATHOLIC

Benet 49, St. Viator 36

NOBLE LEAGUE BLUE

Bulls Prep 58, Noble Street 42

Muchin vs. Rauner at Rowe-Clark, 3:00

NOBLE LEAGUE GOLD

Johnson 39, Comer 31

Butler vs. Hansberry at Hales, 2:00

NOBLE LEAGUE WHITE

DRW 55, Golder 41

Rowe-Clark at Speer, 5:00

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Sunday’s high school basketball scoresSun-Times Staff Reporton March 8, 2021 at 12:12 am Read More »

Teen boy shot in East Garfield ParkSun-Times Wireon March 8, 2021 at 12:29 am

A man was shot dead Feb. 22, 2021, in Grand Crossing.
A 15-year-old boy was shot March 7, 2021, in the 3900 block of West Monroe Street. | Sun-Times file photo

About 3:40 p.m., he was in the parking lot of a convenience store in the 3900 block of West Monroe Street, when someone walked up to him and fired shots.

A 15-year-old boy was shot Sunday in East Garfield Park on the West Side.

About 3:40 p.m., he was in the parking lot of a convenience store in the 3900 block of West Monroe Street, when someone walked up to him and fired shots, Chicago police said.

He was struck in the abdomen and brought to Stroger Hospital for treatment, police said.

Area Four detectives are investigating.

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Teen boy shot in East Garfield ParkSun-Times Wireon March 8, 2021 at 12:29 am Read More »

3 killed in crash in suburban Mount ProspectSun-Times Wireon March 8, 2021 at 12:47 am

A man was fatally shot March 5, 2021, in Palatine.
Three people were killed in a crash March 7, 2021, in suburban Mount Prospect. | Adobe Stock Photo

A white Honda was driving south from the exit of Mt. Prospect Plaza, when a gold Ford entered the intersection and struck the Honda.

Three people were killed in a crash Sunday morning in suburban Mount Prospect.

About 7:45 a.m., officers responded to calls of a rollover crash with passengers trapped in the intersection of Rand Road and Mount Prospect Road, Mount Prospect police said.

An investigation found that a white Honda was driving south from the exit of Mt. Prospect Plaza, when a gold Ford entered the intersection and struck the Honda, police said. The impact of the crash caused the Honda to roll over and come to rest on its roof.

The driver of the Ford was extricated from the vehicle by Mount Prospect fire officials and rushed to the hospital, police said.

Three occupants of the Honda were pronounced dead at the scene, police said.

The crash remains under investigation by the Mount Prospect Police Department Major Crash Investigation Team.

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3 killed in crash in suburban Mount ProspectSun-Times Wireon March 8, 2021 at 12:47 am Read More »

Booted from their home field with little explanation, Washington HS soccer team’s season now hangs in the balanceon March 7, 2021 at 10:50 pm

Members of the boys’ soccer team at George Washington High School on the Far South Side were excited to finally return to the pitch last week, more than six months after high school athletes learned that fall sports were being pushed to the spring.

But after just two days of tryouts, that excitement turned to frustration when they learned they were being booted from their home field in Calumet Park with little explanation. Though students were told the decision was based on COVID-19 restrictions, it’s unclear who made the call or why.

On Sunday, a group of students held a news conference at the field to press for answers and attempt to salvage the season.

“This is where we love to play,” said Gabriel Fuentes, a sophomore on the soccer team. “For us to not have our own field is kind of ridiculous.”

In a message shared with the Sun-Times, Washington’s athletic director, Matt Jandura, said the park district was “still awaiting directives” about Restore Illinois and how it affects public parks.

“This weekend, the adults behind the scenes have been trying to say, ‘What’s going on?'” Joe Trost, an advocate for student athletes, told reporters. “And there’s been no answers.”

Jordan Abudayyeh, a spokeswoman for Gov. J.B. Pritzker, told the Sun-Times that high school athletes “can play if they’re following the youth sports guidelines.”

A spokeswoman for Mayor Lori Lightfoot’s office referred questions to spokespeople for CPS and the park district, who didn’t immediately respond. Jandura also didn’t respond to requests for comment.

Meanwhile, another youth soccer program announced plans Sunday to start using the same field Washington has called home since 1995. The Futbol Club Rayados de Monterrey, located in Chicago and northwest Indiana, noted on Facebook that teams from its soccer academy would begin practicing there Monday.

Amid the confusion, the boys’ soccer team at Washington is under the gun to find another home field.

The team is now mulling whether to start practicing at Pullman Park, which is about six miles from Calumet Park. However, Washington’s Friday home opener against Walter Payton College Prep will likely be rescheduled, according to coach Al Perez.

As Trost noted, state rules require teams to practice seven straight days before playing any games — and CPS schools were already “behind the ball last week.”

“Whereas suburban schools actually started practicing on Monday, CPS didn’t start practicing until Wednesday,” Trost said.

Trost was among those on Sunday who said the thinly explained decision exemplifies the inequities faced by students at schools like Washington, which doesn’t have on-campus soccer facilities like other Chicago Public Schools and those in the suburbs.

“For schools like us — like neighborhood high schools [in] working-class communities, like Black and brown communities — we have to keep facing these injustices brought on by COVID-19,” said Trinity Colon, a junior who plays on the girls’ soccer team.

Trost added that members of the boys soccer team could also miss out on opportunities for college if the season is nixed. College scouts are likely to keep an eye on Washington’s players, given the school has been successful in the past and even won the 2A state championship in 2014.

“It’s really through the power of sport that they have an opportunity to get to college,” Trost said.

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Booted from their home field with little explanation, Washington HS soccer team’s season now hangs in the balanceon March 7, 2021 at 10:50 pm Read More »