Chicago COVID vaccine eligibility expands to Phase 1C

More essential workers, those with underlying medical conditions now eligible to book vaccine appointments

ByCraig Wall, Eric Horng, and ABC7 Chicago Digital Team WLS logo
Tuesday, March 30, 2021
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CHICAGO (WLS) -- Chicago is opening up COVID vaccine eligibility to the Phase 1C group Monday.

The move means anyone 16 and older who has a qualifying medical condition can now book an appointment.

More types of essential workers are also now eligible, including workers in clergy and religious organizations, energy, finance, food and beverage service, higher education, information technology and communications, legal, media, other community or government-based operations and essential functions, personal care and hygiene, public health, public safety, retail, shelter and housing, transportation and logistics, water and wastewater.

WATCH: Mayor Lightfoot speaks about vaccine eligibility expansion in the city

Chicago moved to Phase 1C of COVI D vaccine eligibility Monday.

In Chicago's collar counties of Cook, DuPage, Kane, Lake, and Will, vaccine eligibility has been expanded to anyone in Phase 1A, 1B and 1B+. Phase 1B+ now includes some essential workers, such as government employees, higher education staff, news media, restaurant staff, construction trade workers and religious leaders.

RELATED: Chicago COVID vaccine map shows how many residents vaccinated by zip code

Also starting Monday, vaccination sites run by the city of Chicago will only schedule appointments for people who live in the city.

At a vaccination site in Chinatown, union workers who signed up last week lined up before 8 a.m. to get the single-dose Johnson & Johnson vaccine.

"Well, I was in my car, I'm like, 'Oh my God like I seen all these people and I'm like, I'm gonna take like four hours,' but I asked the lady and she said that the line just looks really bad but it'll take like 30 minutes," said union member Vanessa Arroyo.

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At the Chinatown clinic there were 1,200 available appointments for union members.

"Well the process, to be honest is really smooth," said Brandon Pendleton, who got vaccinated. "Had an 8:45 appointment, line moved pretty well. They got us right in, gave us the shot. And yeah, I'm happy to have it and happy that this whole thing is seemingly coming to an end."

"This vaccination site is the first in the country that is run specifically for union members," said Bob Reiter, president of the Chicago Federation of Labor.

Another labor vaccination clinic will be held at the same Chinatown site next Monday, and other similar clinics are planned for the future.

With the expansion to 1C, the majority of Chicago's adult population is now eligible to get a vaccine. However, officials continuing to urge patience as eligibility does not guarantee an immediate appointment.

"It took me a while," said Michelle Gerol. "The process was a little frustrating, but once I got it, it was like finding the good ticket from the Willy Wonka movie."

This week the state is expected to receive one million doses of the three available vaccines. It comes at a time when Chicago is seeing a spike in cases among young people in and around Lincoln Park, which has raised concerns among health officials.

In other parts of the state where demand is low, health departments are now allowed to expand eligibility to anyone over 16.

"I think we're getting to the point, even in Chicago where in the next couple of weeks, we're going to see the demand for vaccine start to come down and the supplies going to continue to increase," said Dr. Robert Citronberg with Advocate Aurora Health.

The expansion comes at a time when cases are on the rise, and the positivity rate is above 4% with Chicago averaging more than 400 new cases a day, the benchmark that has triggered new reopening mitigations.

In the past 10 days, hospitalizations in Chicago are up 16%, and in suburban Cook County, up more than 20%. Will and Kankakee counties have seen a 27% rise.

"We're certainly seeing a rise in cases," said Dr. Jennifer Seo, CDPH Chief Medical Officer. "It's not to the point that we're seeing in November, but it's definitely something that we want to closely follow. We're very concerned about what the outcome might be over the next 40 days."

Driving the uptick are adults 18 to 39. In Chicago, Mayor Lightfoot said various gatherings, including bar crawls, have been the source of recent outbreaks. She urged caution and patience as people scramble to get appointments.

"Be patient," Lightfoot urged. "We are bringing about a million more people into eligibility. We don't have a million more doses coming to Chicago."

Cook County has yet to announce when it will open access to those in 1C, but did make 25,000 new appointments available at four of its mass vaccination sites Sunday afternoon. Anyone eligible under phases 1A, 1B, 1B+ and approved essential workers were able to sign up for the shot due to new state guidelines, however, those appointments were booked up in just under two hours.

"It was 50,000 people in the waiting room with only 25,000 vaccines," said vaccine hunter Maria Koikas.

Koikas started helping others enroll when she saw how difficult the process was for her own parents.

"It is a million people going for the same hot concert ticket that there is only 100 of them," she said.

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In the last month, Koikas has enrolled nearly 300 people and counting. Her advice is to check often, be prepared for the appointment drop, and don't give up.

RELATED: Coronavirus Illinois: COVID vaccine distribution by county, region

To date, two million Illinois residents, which is 16% of the state population, have been fully vaccinated against COVID-19. The state has been vaccinating over 99,000 people a day on average.

Gov. JB Pritzker said he may be forced to rethink his approach to fully reopening the state fully, which it was on pace to start next week.

Right now, Illinois is in the green on vaccination rates for those 65+, with nearly 69% receiving one dose - close to the 70% required.

But it's in the red on health metrics, including for daily cases, hospitalizations, and new admissions. And until that changes, there will be no further reopening.