North suburban Lake and McHenry counties will be the eighth region of the state’s COVID-19 plan facing increased economic restrictions as COVID-19 surges in the state and Republican opposition mounts to Gov. J.B. Pritzker’s mitigation plan.

“Region 9 (which includes the two counties) is today seeing an 8.4 percent positivity average, up from 4.8 percent this time last month and up from 3.1 percent in late June,” Pritzker said Wednesday at his daily COVID-19 briefing in Chicago.

“Average COVID-related hospital admissions today are five times as high as they were in mid-June, and three times as high as in mid-September. In other words, things are bad in Region 9 and getting worse.”

Beginning Saturday, increased mitigation measures will include the closure of bars and restaurants to indoor service and limits on the size of social gatherings — both indoor and outdoor — to the lesser of 25 people or 25 percent of capacity, among other restrictions.

The announcement came as the state reported another 51 virus-related deaths, including one youth, three people in their 50s, five in their 60s, 10 in their 70s, 23 in their 80s and nine 90 or older.

The 6,110 cases reported Wednesday marked the second-highest one-day total, while the 70,752 test results reported over the previous 24 hours made for an 8.6 percent one-day positivity rate, the highest since June 2. The statewide seven-day rolling average case positivity rate increased to 6.7 percent, the highest since May 30.

The virus has now claimed 9,619 lives among 389,095 confirmed cases.

In the midst of a second major wave of COVID-19, Pritzker said the state is far more prepared than it was in March and April, as it now has stockpiles of personal protective equipment and far greater testing capacity.

“Are we better prepared? We sure are,” Pritzker said. “That doesn’t mean that we can stop the virus. It means that with the virus present among us, we at least can diagnose people, we can make sure that people have PPE and especially masks.”

Still, Pritzker called the ongoing increase in virus spread a “tremendous wave” that’s affecting the whole nation. He was joined by Illinois State Police Director Brendan Kelly, and both men noted that State Police would be enforcing COVID-19 mitigation measures in the regions subjected to them.

Kelly said ISP has received referrals and complaints and worked with local health departments, local law enforcement and the Illinois Department of Public Health in 37 different counties. The department has issued misdemeanor citations in five counties so far.

The process for handling violations is laid out by emergency rules approved by a legislative committee, which requires voluntary compliance be sought before citations can be issued or licenses revoked.

According to Kelly, citations come when “you have some business owners, you got waitresses, waiters, cook staff, they’re just outright refusing to wear masks and, you know, right now that’s just kind of gross.”

Pritzker said enforcement is a local responsibility, but state police will be called in when locals fall short.

“There are some areas where local leaders are not doing what they need to do, and that’s where state police would come in handy,” Pritzker said.

“Region 9 (which includes the two counties) is today seeing an 8.4 percent positivity average, up from 4.8 percent this time last month and up from 3.1 percent in late June,” Pritzker said Wednesday at his daily COVID-19 briefing in Chicago.

“Average COVID-related hospital admissions today are five times as high as they were in mid-June, and three times as high as in mid-September. In other words, things are bad in Region 9 and getting worse.”

Beginning Saturday, increased mitigation measures will include the closure of bars and restaurants to indoor service and limits on the size of social gatherings — both indoor and outdoor — to the lesser of 25 people or 25 percent of capacity, among other restrictions.

The announcement came as the state reported another 51 virus-related deaths, including one youth, three people in their 50s, five in their 60s, 10 in their 70s, 23 in their 80s and nine 90 or older.

The 6,110 cases reported Wednesday marked the second-highest one-day total, while the 70,752 test results reported over the previous 24 hours made for an 8.6 percent one-day positivity rate, the highest since June 2. The statewide seven-day rolling average case positivity rate increased to 6.7 percent, the highest since May 30.

The virus has now claimed 9,619 lives among 389,095 confirmed cases.

In the midst of a second major wave of COVID-19, Pritzker said the state is far more prepared than it was in March and April, as it now has stockpiles of personal protective equipment and far greater testing capacity.

“Are we better prepared? We sure are,” Pritzker said. “That doesn’t mean that we can stop the virus. It means that with the virus present among us, we at least can diagnose people, we can make sure that people have PPE and especially masks.”

Still, Pritzker called the ongoing increase in virus spread a “tremendous wave” that’s affecting the whole nation. He was joined by Illinois State Police Director Brendan Kelly, and both men noted that State Police would be enforcing COVID-19 mitigation measures in the regions subjected to them.

Kelly said ISP has received referrals and complaints and worked with local health departments, local law enforcement and the Illinois Department of Public Health in 37 different counties. The department has issued misdemeanor citations in five counties so far.

The process for handling violations is laid out by emergency rules approved by a legislative committee, which requires voluntary compliance be sought before citations can be issued or licenses revoked.

According to Kelly, citations come when “you have some business owners, you got waitresses, waiters, cook staff, they’re just outright refusing to wear masks and, you know, right now that’s just kind of gross.”

Pritzker said enforcement is a local responsibility, but state police will be called in when locals fall short.

“There are some areas where local leaders are not doing what they need to do, and that’s where state police would come in handy,” Pritzker said.