FREE
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29th Ward participatory budgeting projects selected,
Vol. 35 No. 7
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February 17, 2021
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austinweeklynews.com
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Also serving Garfield Park
@AustinWeeklyChi
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How to visit Garfifield ld Parkk Conservatory, PAGE 6
@AustinWeeklyNews
Rush outlines plans to provide vaccines to West Siders The hospital has been vaccinating seniors through its Rush@Home program since Feb. 11 By IGOR STUDENKOV Contributing Reporter
Rush University Medical Center, 1620 W. Harrison St., recently started giving COVID-19 vaccines to homebound seniors on the West Side and in the west suburbs. The hospital is also gearing up for a much bigger effort to vaccinate high-risk Austin residents this spring. Under the current phase of Chicago’s vaccination program, Phase 1B, vaccines are available to people age 65 and older, residents of group settings, caregivers, medical professionals and most essential workers. But Rush and other hospitals haven’t been getting enough supplies to keep up with the demand, forcing them to limit vaccination hours. The center is still trying to get the vaccines it does have to West Siders who need it most. Since Feb. 11, it has been vaccinating homebound seniors who are part of the Rush@Home program, which provides services to patients who have trouble getting to the doctor’s office due to their health conditions. Rush is also preparing to send teams into Austin to vaccinate residents most at risk of getting COVID-19, though, as of Feb. 12, the details were still being worked out. When the Pfizer and Moderna vaccines were first approved, they were only available to healthcare workers, and residents and staff of long-term care facilities. The city moved to Phase 1B on Jan. 25. Although Gov. JB Pritzker on Feb. 10 expanded eligibility to all Illinois residents See VACCINES on page 3
Art by Raziel Puma for City Bureau
SURVIVAL STORIES: In a special series about the COVID-19 housing crisis produced by City Bureau, West side residents shared their stories about trying to secure safe, affordable housing amid a pandemic.
The housing cliff
Some lost work. Others have been housing insecure for years. Renters in Chicago were already struggling to navigate a grim housing landscape. Then the COVID-19 pandemic hit. By JUSTIN AGRELO, NATALIE FRAZIER, MALIK JACKSON and WOOJAE JULIA SONG City Bureau
The Housing Cliff is a special series about the COVID-19 housing crisis produced by City Bureau, a civic journalism
lab based in Chicago. Access the full series online at citybureau.org. Andre Wallace has wanted to move for months. The West Garfield Park apartment he shares with his partner and their two small children is falling apart. The young couple didn’t even have a
usable kitchen the first two months of living there. Water pours from the ceiling whenever it rains, causing debris to fall into the apartment. The bathwater sometimes runs brown—if it runs at all. Wallace has struggled to get his landSee THE HOUSING CLIFF on page 11