The Ripple Effect Is a Major Concern Chicagoans Worry Lollapalooza May Become a COVID-19 Hotspot
When music fan Noah Zelinsky bought tickets to the Chicago music festival Lollapalooza in May, he thought it might signal something of a return to normalcy after more than a year of isolation. âThereâs so much pent up excitement, being the first major thing back,â he says. But a lot can change in two months. âNow, thereâs a lot of fear countering that.â
As Lollapalooza arrives, along with its potentially hundreds of thousands of attendees, in Grant Park, worrying signs abound: the highly contagious Delta variant of the coronavirus has spread across the U.S., with Chicagoâs COVID-19 daily case rate quintuple what it was a month ago, albeit nowhere near the heights of this spring. And recent music festivals, including the Verknipt festival in Utrecht, Netherlands, and Rolling Loud in Miami, have been connected to outbreaks among their attendees and surrounding communities. Whether or not Lollapalooza, which runs from July 29 through Aug. 1, succeeds in holding COVID-19 at bay could make the festival a tipping point in whether or not the countryâs triumphant reopening continues as planned throughout the summer and fall.
âI think it has the makings [of a superspreader event],â Theresa Chapple-McGruder, a Chicago area maternal and child health epidemiologist, told TIME. âWhen weâre in a place where rates are rising, we need to put prevention strategies in place. I donât see how a large festival like this could meet that criteria of slowing the spread.â
Relaxed safety requirements in the face of rising casesLollapalooza has been a Chicago institution for 15 years, regularly drawing 100,000 people each day of the typically four-day event. This year, the lineup includes Miley Cyrus, Tyler the Creator and the Foo Fighters, and marks the first major cross-genre festival to return to the U.S. since the pandemicâs start. Lollapaloozaâs parent company, Live Nation, has been working closely with public officials, including Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady, to implement safety guidelines, including a system to check if attendees have valid COVID-19 vaccine cards, vaccine records or negative tests upon entering, and to advocate that everyone wear masks while on festival grounds.
âItâs outdoors. Weâve been having large-scale events all over the city since June without major problems or issues,â Chicago Mayor Lori Lightfoot said in a press conference this week. On Thursday, the first day of the festival, organizers said that 90% of attendees have showed proof of vaccination, with 600 people turned away for lack of paperwork.
However, in the two months since the festival was reannounced in Mayâ"when full weekend passes rapidly sold out, perhaps in part because the event was canceled last yearâ"the Delta variant has spread rapidly throughout the U.S., accounting for 83% of new COVID-19 cases, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said last week, with most clustered in unvaccinated populations. The number of new cases reported daily in Chicago had dropped to as low as 34 in late June, but is now back up to 192 a day, although hospitalizations remain drastically lower than their peak this spring. (Hospitalizations typically lag behind increases in case rates.)
âWeâve seen data suggesting that vaccinated people are more likely to be breakthrough cases now than at other points in time with other variants, and that vaccinated people who are breakthrough cases may spread just as easily as unvaccinated people,â Chapple-McGruder says. âThose two pieces really lead to the concern about community transmission.â
Even as cases rise, Lollapalooza has relaxed its requirements for unvaccinated attendees. While Lightfoot had said in May that festivalgoers needed to show a negative COVID-19 test taken 24 hours or less before entering, that number has now been increased to 72 hours, allowing a much longer window to theoretically contract the virus before the festival. Earlier this month, the Verknipt festival in the Netherlands admitted unvaccinated attendees as long as they had a negative test taken within 40 hours of entering. The festival was later linked to 1,000 COVID-19 cases among its 20,000 attendees, and Lennart van Trigt, a representative of the Utrecht health board, admitted that the eventâs policies were misguided. âIn 40 hours people can do a lot of things, like visiting friends and going to bars and clubs,â Van Trigt said. COVID-19 tests also arenât 100% accurate and can be easily fakedâ"and there is a lag between when people contract the virus and when they might return a positive test.
Not all recent similar events have suffered from outbreaks. The Exit Festival, an electronic music festival in Serbia which welcomed some 45,000 people a day, recorded zero infections according to a study published a week afterward. Serbia has had relatively low COVID-19 rates, but festival organizers told Billboard that more than half of its attendees were foreign visitors; their monitored sample of festival guests was tested for COVID-19 both when entering the gates and a week later.
On the other hand, there have been reports of numerous COVID-19 cases connected to last weekendâs hip-hop festival Rolling Loud in Miami. Tens of thousands of people showed up daily to the festival, which did not require masks, vaccinations or negative tests. This week, the rapper Dess Dior and the actor Alexa Leighton, among others, announced on social media that they had tested positive for COVID-19. Their infections coincided with a larger spike in Florida at large, in which COVID-19 cases and hospitalizations have risen dramatically.
Potential for spread far beyond Chicago city limitsCritics of Lollapalooza are worried that the festival could spread COVID-19 in two dimensions: first in the Chicago area, and second, everywhere people travel back to after the weekend ends. Lollapalooza is a commuter festivalâ"set in the middle of downtown Chicago, with many festivalgoers arriving by public transit from other parts of the metropolis. If that trend holds, it could make for buses and trains on the Chicago Transit Authority (CTA) jam-packed with a mix of unvaccinated festivalgoers and essential workers returning to in-person work, every day of the festival. âMany people who rely on using public transportation are essential workers who donât have remote accommodationsâ"and thereâs going to be a domino effect, where theyâre going to be on the same CTA car or [in the same] bars and restaurants as all these people coming in from outside the city,â says Elena Gormley, an organizer for Social Service Workers United-Chicago.
If the festival turns out to be a superspreading event, there could be significant trickle-down effects. Mayor Lightfoot told the New York Timesâ Kara Swisher that if Chicagoâs daily case rate jumps over 200, she would consider reimplementing a mask mandate as well as other measures. Jim DeRogatis, a longtime prominent Chicago music journalist, told the Washington Post that the impact of another shutdown on Chicagoâs independent venues could be catastrophic. âIf infections start again in a serious way and the city has to start shutting down again, I donât see how they survive,â he said.
Others are more concerned about what happens when the festivalgoers return home to places with lower vaccination rates. (About 52% percent of Chicagoâs population has been vaccinated, which is slightly higher than the national average.) Chicago health officials just added nine states to the cityâs travel advisoryâ"including nearby states like Missouri, Arkansas and Tennesseeâ"which encourages unvaccinated travelers from those states to either obtain a negative test or quarantine. But it will be difficult for health officials to track those people if they arrive and leave by car. âWe donât even have to look as far as neighboring states: I think itâs going to be an issue with neighboring counties and cities to Chicago,â Dr. Chapple-McGruder says. âThe ripple effect is a major concern for me.â
Putting faith in festival organizers and fellow attendeesOn the subreddit r/Lollapalooza, a conversation emerged this week about COVID-19, with some expressing concerns and others readily dismissing them. âIf I get it, I get it. Iâm gonna enjoy this weekend. Been waiting a fat minute for a someone [sic] normal summer,â wrote one commenter.
Noah Zelinsky, who is 21 and from Chicago, is attending the festival with his friend Savanna Savoy, 18, who drove down from Minnesota to attend. They say they have friends flying into Chicago for the festival from across the east coast, and that they are both vaccinated and eager to return to live musicâ"a once-essential aspect of their livesâ"despite the widespread consternation about the festival they are seeing online. âNow that thereâs an opportunity to go out, it shouldnât be an issue for those who are vaccinated, since weâre the ones who were staying home for so long,â Savoy says.
Savoy and Zelinsky say they plan to wear their masks for most of the outdoors festival, while acknowledging the organizersâ guidance to stay 6 feet away from people will likely be impossible. They also plan to go to some of the festivalâs afterparty concerts, which take place indoors. âWeâre putting a lot of hope in the other people around us,â Zelinsky says.
Dr. Chapple-McGruder recommends that festivalgoers wear their masks outside and particularly in crowded spaces, find less-crowded places to eat and take public transit during off-peak hours. âIf you live with or canât avoid contact with high-risk individuals, maybe reconsider your attendance,â she says.
Meanwhile, nearby businesses are contemplating the risk-reward ratio, with some taking the plunge into opening up to a wider, more maskless clientele for the potential economic benefits. Billy Dec, who owns the Underground nightclub less than a mile from the park, hosts all-night afterparties for Lollapalooza artists and attendees every year, and is looking forward to welcoming revelers back: âThere are a lot of people that are really positive about what the festival is doing for the spirit of a city that this year has been really tough on,â he says. However, he says he will keep his clubâs capacity much lower than in years past. âWeâre going to be over-careful about capacity at the door,â he says. âWeâre going to keep our numbers low.â
Table to Stix Ramen, in Evanston, will be part of the festivalâs Chow Town area; it closed for a full week prior in order to prepare for the potentially huge and hungry crowds. While chef and owner Kenny Chou typically has five employees, he will be bringing 20 onsite and says he has discussed the risks with them. âEvery one of my staff members is vaccinated and will be attending, with full knowledge of the risk of the delta variant,â Chou wrote in an email. âWe know it will be difficult social distancing with this large of a crowd. I trust the coordinators and the Lollapalooza staff to keep everyone safe.â
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