Stories by Quinn Myers
How Howard Brown Health is Coping with Virus While Serving LGBTQ Communities
| Quinn Myers
Howard Brown Health’s clinic in Chicago’s Lakeview neighborhood provides a wide range of health care services with a special focus on LGBTQ communities. Like other health care providers, COVID-19 has forced it to make some changes.
How Independent Media Outlets are Covering the Coronavirus Pandemic
| Blair Paddock
Whether working from home or reporting from the street, journalists provide information to keep communities safe and healthy. We check in with some members of the local independent media to see how they’re faring with this developing story.
COVID-19 Across Chicago: Boystown
| Paris Schutz
The coronavirus has effectively shut down what locals describe as the world’s largest contiguous LGBTQ neighborhood. How businesses, social service agencies and others are dealing with the pandemic.
Toni Preckwinkle Gives COVID-19 Update from Hyde Park Home
| Evan Garcia
Cook County is bracing for a surge in coronavirus-related deaths. We check in with Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkle, who is not sick but chose to self-isolate after a member of her security detail contracted the virus.
Judge Rejects Motion Seeking Release of ‘Medically Vulnerable’ Cook County Jail Detainees
| Matt Masterson
The Cook County sheriff must begin implementing additional sanitation and precaution measures at the jail, but a federal judge rejected calls for the release of large numbers of detainees.
Pritzker: Unlikely Stay-at-Home Order Will be Lifted Early
New statewide totals: 16,422 cases, 528 deaths
| Kristen Thometz
Data may show the number of COVID-19 cases in Illinois is growing at a slower pace than some projections had forecast, but Gov. J.B. Pritzker said his stay-at-home order will remain in place through the end of the month.
Ask Geoffrey: How Did Chicago Manage Epidemics Throughout its History?
| Erica Gunderson
The 1918 Spanish flu was not even close to being Chicago’s first bout with fast-spreading disease. Geoffrey Baer looks at how Chicago managed a tidal wave of diseases in its earliest years.
The Park District is Making its Own Hand Sanitizer, Thanks to Illinois Soybean Farmers
| Patty Wetli
The Illinois Soybean Association is contributing raw materials and packaging to the Chicago Park District, which is producing 600 gallons of hand sanitizer for its staff and other essential workers.
Some Surprisingly Powerful Players Have Joined the Fight to Save the Monarch Butterfly
| Patty Wetli
The University of Illinois at Chicago will administer a groundbreaking agreement that encourages energy companies and transportation entities, among others, to voluntarily convert right-of-way land to pollinator-friendly habitat.
CTA Announces Rear Bus Boarding, Rider Limits Amid COVID-19 Pandemic
| Patty Wetli
As the coronavirus continues to spread, the Chicago Transit Authority is announcing additional safety measures for its employees and riders to promote social distancing, including rear-door boarding on buses effective Thursday.
More Than 250 Cook County Jail Detainees Have Now Tested Positive for COVID-19
New York Times calls jail ‘the largest-known source of U.S. infections’
| Matt Masterson
Data released by the Cook County Sheriff’s Office shows 251 detainees have so far tested positive for COVID-19, as have 150 Sheriff’s Office employees. On Sunday, the jail recorded its first virus-related death.
West Ridge Leads City in Virus Cases, But Black Communities Disproportionately Impacted
| Paul Caine
The West Ridge neighborhood on Chicago’s North Side has the highest number of confirmed COVID-19 cases in the city, but a cluster of zip codes on the South Side are not far behind, according to newly released data.
Local Company Makes Coronavirus-Killing Disinfectants
| Amanda Vinicky
Everyone knows the basics: Clean your hands. Wipe down surfaces. But for more on how to protect yourself from the coronavirus, we spoke with a local chemical supplier.
Relief for Small Businesses: What the Federal Government is Offering
| Blair Paddock
The future for many small businesses is unclear. To create some security, the federal government has stepped in with $349 billion in loans for small businesses, but the programs have had a bumpy start.
Facing Threat of Virus, Chicago’s First Responders Busy as Ever
| Paris Schutz
While most Chicago residents are staying home to avoid contracting or spreading COVID-19, the city’s first responders are as busy as ever – and they’ve been hit hard.
Celebrating Easter and Passover During the Pandemic
| Alexandra Silets
Will the holidays be vastly different during the stay-at-home order? A local rabbi and pastor talk about how they are ministering during this strange time.
Outgoing Police Superintendent Charlie Beck on His Tenure in Chicago
| Quinn Myers
Interim Chicago Police Superintendent Charlie Beck is winding down his brief tenure at the helm of the Chicago Police Department. We ask him about protecting officers during the pandemic, his efforts to restructure the department, gun violence and more.
Pritzker Details State’s Plan to Reach 10,000 COVID-19 Tests Per Day
New statewide totals: 15,078 cases, 462 deaths
| Kristen Thometz
More than 75,000 people in Illinois have so far been tested for COVID-19, according to state health officials, and more than 6,000 tests are being conducted each day. But Gov. J.B. Pritzker had hoped to test thousands more by now.
Police Union President Kevin Graham Calls for Stronger Measures to Protect Officers
| Quinn Myers
Fraternal Order of Police Lodge 7 president says he’d like to see increased sanitizing procedures for Chicago police officers and vehicles, as well as greater precautions taken at individual police stations.
CTA Bus Driver Toronzo Cannon Sings the Blues, Literally
| Marc Vitali
Bus drivers have a tough job these days. And musicians are pretty much out of work. We spoke with one CTA driver who is also a songwriter with a new record. He drives people all over town, but right now he can’t play for the people.
Right-wing Terrorists Looking to ‘Weaponize’ Pandemic, Says U of C Expert
| Paul Caine
Could hospitals and supermarkets become targets for terror groups looking to exploit the pandemic to advance their racist agenda? We speak with international terrorism expert Robert Pape.
Citywide Liquor Curfew Takes Effect Thursday in Chicago, No More Sales After 9 p.m.
| Matt Masterson
Mayor Lori Lightfoot says the city will begin enforcing a curfew on the sale of liquor in order to prevent “congregate activity” that’s been seen across the city near stores that sell alcohol.
CTA Board OKs $40 Million in Possible Borrowing to Keep System Running
| Nick Blumberg
The Chicago Transit Authority says it has enough cash on hand to keep buses and trains running through the end of the April – but if federal bailout money doesn’t come soon, the agency will be forced to borrow to keep customers moving.
Celebrated Singer-Songwriter John Prine Has Died at 73
| Associated Press
John Prine, the ingenious singer-songwriter who explored the heartbreaks, indignities and absurdities of everyday life in “Angel from Montgomery,” “Sam Stone,” “Hello in There” and scores of other indelible tunes, died Tuesday at the age of 73.
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