Illinois
COVID-19 hospitalizations in Illinois continue to go up
The Illinois Division of Public Well being reported 5,686 new confirmed and possible circumstances of COVID-19 and three further deaths Thursday.
The state’s seven-day rolling common for brand new circumstances per day went as much as 5,618, the very best common since Feb. 10.
For Wednesday, the state administered 11,533 vaccines.
From the IDPH’s knowledge dashboard:
Case fee per 100,000: 44.1 (+1.7 from Wednesday)
Share of ICU beds accessible: 19%
COVID-19 identified hospital admissions (7-day rolling common): 77 (+2 from Wednesday, highest fee since Feb. 28)
Weekly deaths reported: 46
Illinois has seen 3,200,930 whole circumstances of the virus, and 33,698 folks have died.
As of late Wednesday, Illinois had 880 COVID-19 sufferers within the hospital, an in a single day enhance of 19 sufferers and essentially the most whole folks within the hospital with COVID-19 since March 2. Of these, 85 had been in intensive care items, and 21 had been on ventilators.
County-by-county replace: As of mid-April, the IDPH will present a county-by-county replace specializing in the case fee per 100,000 folks, the proportion of ICU beds accessible, a rolling seven-day common of COVID-19 identified hospital admissions and weekly deaths.
The definition of a COVID-19 identified hospital admission is as follows: The seven-day common of day by day variety of hospital admissions given a prognosis of COVID-19 as measured utilizing the Illinois Syndromic Surveillance System.
Illinois collects all emergency division and inpatient visits via syndromic surveillance from all acute care hospitals in Illinois in near-real time. Knowledge is offered with a three-day lag to permit time for prognosis to be reported.
On the county stage, a go to is counted by the place the affected person resides. A affected person with a number of visits can be counted for every go to. Admissions might not be due to COVID-19 as the first trigger. Syndromic surveillance knowledge isn’t the identical supply utilized by CDC to report COVID-19 hospital admissions knowledge.
County | Case Price/100,000 | % accessible ICU beds | COVID-19 identified hospital admissions (7-day rolling common) |
Weekly deaths |
---|---|---|---|---|
Bureau | 17.3 | 18 | 0 | 0 |
Chicago | 41.2 | 20 | 12 | 7 |
DeKalb | 53.6 | 9.9 | 1 | 1 |
DuPage | 67.4 | 26 | 10 | 4 |
Grundy | 29.1 | 18 | 0 | 0 |
Kane | 44.7 | 26 | 3 | 2 |
Kendall | 59 | 18 | 1 | 0 |
Lake | 57.5 | 22 | 5 | 2 |
La Salle | 38.1 | 18 | 0 | 0 |
Lee | 33.8 | 9.9 | 0 | 0 |
McHenry | 47.5 | 22 | 4 | 2 |
Ogle | 31.1 | 9.9 | 0 | 0 |
Suburban Cook dinner |
59.3 | 15 | 21 | 7 |
Whiteside | 34.9 | 9.9 | 0 | 1 |
Will | 45.9 | 22 | 4 | 3 |
Vaccine replace: As of Thursday, the IDPH reported a complete of 26,953,045 doses of COVID-19 vaccines have been distributed statewide, with 22,081,962 vaccines administered.
As of Thursday, 8,256,023 Illinoisans have been totally vaccinated, or 64.80% of the inhabitants. Illinois has a inhabitants of 12,741,080 folks.
CDC numbers:
Amongst Illinois residents 5 and older:
Totally Vaccinated: 8,741,238 (73.3%)
At Least 1 Dose: 9,728,492 (81.6%)
Amongst Illinois residents 12 and older:
Totally Vaccinated: 8,326,771 (76.8%)
At Least 1 Dose: 9,261,528 (85.5%)
Amongst Illinois residents 18 and older:
Totally Vaccinated: 7,691,166 (78.1%)
At Least 1 Dose: 8,563,899 (86.9%)
Amongst Illinois residents 65 and older:
Totally Vaccinated: 1,821,558 (89.2%)
At Least 1 Dose: 1,988,317 (95%)
There will be as a lot as a 72-hour delay in reporting from well being care suppliers on vaccines administered.
In northern Illinois, right here is the proportion of the inhabitants totally vaccinated by county:
Chicago: 68.34%
Suburban Cook dinner: 72.49%
Lake: 69.55%
McHenry: 65.37%
DuPage: 75.15%
Kane: 66.09%
Will: 66.34%
Kendall: 68.62%
La Salle: 58.12%
Grundy: 57.39%
DeKalb: 56.33%
Ogle: 56.67%
Lee: 58.70%
Whiteside: 51.64%
Bureau: 56.45%
Illinois
Illinois Tollway Board approves billion-dollar, multi-year capital plan
DIXON — The Illinois Tollway Board of Directors has approved a new seven-year capital plan to support ongoing infrastructure projects and bridge the gap between the “Move Illinois” program and the agency’s next long-term capital plan, “Bridging the Future.”
The $2 billion “Bridging the Future” capital plan will help modernize the Illinois Tollway’s infrastructure to help support future projects while addressing maintenance issues along the five roadways on the Tollway system, including the Tri-State Tollway (I-94/I-294/I-80), the Jane Addams Memorial Tollway (I-90), the Reagan Memorial Tollway (I-88), the Veterans Memorial Tollway (I-355) and the Illinois Route 390 Tollway.
‘Bridging the Future’ overview
- Connecting infrastructure – $258 million will be spent on interchange work, including the I-355/I-88 interchange, state Route 390 Tollway at County Farm Road and the I-88 at York Road/22nd Street interchanges. Improvements will also be made to the Lake Cook Road Bridge over I-94.
- Improving mobility – $725 million will be spent on bridge reconstruction and widening projects, including local crossroad and mainline bridges on I-294, railroad bridges on I-294 and I-88 and crossroad bridge reconstruction at the north end of I-94.
- Modernizing the system – $532 million will be spent on system upgrades and maintenance systemwide, including bridge repairs, pavement rehabilitation and funding for improvements to toll plazas and tollway facilities.
- Preparing for the future – $485 million will be allocated for technology investments in active traffic management, upgrades to back-office systems and support for pilot programs and studies.
“The Bridging the Future capital plan is a smart and balanced approach that ensures the completion of critical improvements as we continue the engagement necessary to advance our long-term capital planning process,” Board Chairman Arnie Rivera said. “The Illinois Tollway Board has a fiscal responsibility to prioritize strategic regional projects with system upkeep to leverage funds efficiently.”
No changes to the tollway’s current tolling structure or any further debt financing are expected to fund “Bridging the Future” outside of what is already planned for the “Move Illinois” program, according to a news release.
“Throughout the past year, we’ve been gathering stakeholder and community input as part of our long-term strategic and capital planning process, and one thing we’ve heard across the board is that customers, communities and contractors don’t want to see a pause in progress or wait for the next capital program to begin,” Executive Director Cassaundra Rouse said. “The Bridging the Future plan will help keep our regional economic engine primed, delivering jobs and contract opportunities and also ensuring our planned infrastructure improvements remain on track.”
“Move Illinois,” the tollway’s current $15 billion capital program, is expected to finish by the end of 2027. The program has already accomplished several milestones, including the 2017 completion of state Route 390, the rebuilt Jane Addams Memorial Tollway (I-90) with its SmartRoad corridor and the 2022 interchange connecting I-294 to I-57.
Construction of the new I-490 Tollway, including reconstruction and widening of the Central Tri-State Tollway (I-294), is on schedule for completion.
The Illinois Tollway is a user-funded system without federal or state funding for its maintenance and operations. It oversees 294 miles of roadways across 12 counties in Northern Illinois.
For more information, visit illinoistollway.com.
Illinois
Why Illinois Basketball Is Strangely Sinking in KenPom Rankings
About two weeks ago, Illinois was fresh off a bounce-back win over then-No. 20 Wisconsin and sitting at 7-2 (1-1 Big Ten).
Even considering the previous Friday’s overtime loss to Northwestern – which hadn’t won a high-major game at that point – and the fact that Illinois had dropped out of the AP Top 25 poll, the Illini were still well-respected by the metrics, landing at No. 15 in the KenPom rankings.
Fast forward to present day, after the Illini have played two more games. A heart-breaking two-point home loss to No. 1 Tennessee and a commendable 80-77 neutral-site win over a 10-2 Missouri squad in St. Louis.
Naturally, one would think 40 competitive minutes against the top team in the country and a victory over a high-quality SEC team (especially in a rivalry game) would boost not only Illinois’ reputation but also its standing in metrics such as KenPom.
Actually, the opposite was the case.
In fact, Illinois dropped all the way to No. 23 – no longer even among the top five in the Big Ten (Maryland, Oregon, Michigan State, UCLA, and Michigan are all ranked above).
Even more surprising, this came during a time when the Illini’s defensive efficiency actually climbed, from 17th all the way up to 11th over the past two weeks.
The issue, as has been the case all season, lies on the other end of the floor.
Over that two-week stretch, Illinois’ offensive efficiency has fallen from 25th to 37th. Given that KenPom’s metrics use a combination of data from the box score and play-by-play, it’s likely that Illinois’ KenPom offensive efficiency has continued to falter due to its combined 40-for-108 shooting (37.0 percent) against Tennessee and Missouri.
It’s important to note that it is only late December and Illinois has played just two conference games, which means two things: 1) KenPom isn’t working with a great deal of data just yet, and 2) the Illini will get a boatload of opportunities to prove themselves moving forward.
And those opportunities are coming sooner rather than later, as Illinois gets its last tune-up game of the season against Chicago State on Sunday before diving head-first into conference play and kicking the New Year off with a matchup against No. 9 Oregon in Eugene on January 2.
3 Big Takeaways From Illinois Basketball’s Rivalry Win Against Missouri
Illinois Basketball Outlasts Missouri to Win a Braggin’ Rights Banger
Illinois Basketball Report Card: Grades vs. Missouri (Game 11)
Illinois
Duplex in Springfield sells for $1.1 million
A 1,710-square-foot two-unit house built in 1969 has changed hands. The property located at 57 East Bay Path Terrace in Springfield was sold on Dec. 6, 2024. The $1,100,000 purchase price works out to $643 per square foot. This two-story duplex presents a total of four bedrooms and two bathrooms. The interior features just one fireplace. The property sits on a 5,022-square-foot lot.
Additional houses have recently been sold nearby:
- In December 2023, a 1,710-square-foot home on Humbert Street in Springfield sold for $318,000, a price per square foot of $186. The home has 4 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms.
- On Cloran Street, Springfield, in December 2021, a 1,710-square-foot home was sold for $310,000, a price per square foot of $181. The home has 4 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms.
- A 1,920-square-foot home at 37-39 Nathaniel Street in Springfield sold in January 2023, for $249,900, a price per square foot of $130. The home has 4 bedrooms and 2 bathrooms.
Real Estate Newswire is a service provided by United Robots, which uses machine learning to generate analysis of data from Propmix, an aggregator of national real-estate data. See more Real Estate News
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