Photography: (Ezike) John J. Kim/Chicago Tribune; (Welch) Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune; (Karnisovas) Aaron Ontiveroz/The Denver Post; (Arwady) Terrence Antonio James/Chicago Tribune; (Newman) Antonio Perez/Chicago Tribune; (Pulley) Marcus Smith; (Sanchez) Afkara Mason; (Johnson) ANF Chicago; (Walden) Samantha Cabrera Friend/Field Foundation; (Thompson) Stephen Lovekin/Getty Images; (Freshgoods) Nolis Anderson; (McEnany) SHOWTIME; (Cole, Rodriguez) Jose M. Osorio/Chicago Tribune; (Toia) Zbigniew Bzdak/Chicago Tribune; (Requejo Carballo) Courtesy of Elevated Chicago; (Bishop Sleets) E. Jason Wambsgans/Chicago Tribune; (Jo MaMa) Adam Ouahmane; (Stoole) Dan Mistich; (Friedman) Steve Ewert; (Cooper) Victoria Messina/Rheaply; (Christian) Justin Barbin/OTV; (Williams) Brian Cassella/Chicago Tribune; (Romanucci) Victor Hilitski/Chicago Tribune; (Jones) Deshon Gibbs; (Morris) Courtesy of Zeke Morris; (Ware) Dan Machnik; (Lee) Courtesy of University of Chicago; (Puente) Chicago Tribune; (Davis) David Jenkins

thanks for the post.
Thank you
You’d think Cardinal Cupich or Jim Rigg from the archdiocese would be on the list given they made the call to provide in-person for 80,000 students this school year, and did it safely and effectively. Not sure anyone else on this list had that kind of direct impact.
None of our public health workers who ensured our state and city even had a COVID plan in the absence of federal leadership? Yeah, sure.