Cook County News Herald

Face Coverings needed for local workers


Some say Pierre’s personality is a bit “wooden” but even Pierre has enough class to wear a facemask to help slow the spread of the coronavirus pandemic. Photo courtesy of Adrian Howard Larsen

Some say Pierre’s personality is a bit “wooden” but even Pierre has enough class to wear a facemask to help slow the spread of the coronavirus pandemic. Photo courtesy of Adrian Howard Larsen

The Cook County Emergency Operations Center (EOC) announced on May 13 that it needs additional cloth face coverings for employees of local businesses.

With local businesses engaging in curbside service and looking toward full reopening, the EOC has been trying to gauge their needs for items such as cloth face coverings, said EOC Logistics Officer Lori Ericson. To better prepare, she worked with Jim Boyd of the Cook County Chamber of Commerce to message local business owners over the weekend.

“We had a tremendous response to that message, such that we’ve given the Cook County Chamber of Commerce 165 cloth face coverings for local business owners and their employees,” said Ericson. “And that is just the start.”

Ericson said the EOC is requesting donations of 600 more cloth face coverings for employees countywide. “That, combined with the cloth face coverings received to date, should put the county in good stead for the foreseeable future,” she stated.

And putting the county in good stead is important, said Cook County Board Chair Myron Bursheim, adding that cloth face coverings are one of the tools individuals will encounter more as the county – and nation – acclimate to a “new normal” under COVID-19.

“Thanks to the generous support of our community, we’ve been able to provide the masks that our healthcare and essential workers need,” Bursheim said. “Now we can help support our local businesses by providing cloth face coverings for their employees.”

And not just employees may be wearing cloth face coverings in the weeks and months to come, as some businesses are asking customers to wear masks while in their stores.

“Whatever one’s feelings about cloth face coverings, I encourage you to think of wearing one as an act of kindness toward one another,” Bursheim said. “Our efforts to date have kept our confirmed case count at zero and, while that will change, wearing a cloth face covering in public spaces helps lessen the risk of unknowingly infecting others. If we all do our part, together we can slow the spread of COVID-19 in our community over the next several months.”

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