One of America's Largest Cities Is Using a 1984 Tactic to Find Quarantine Violators
According to Chicago Department of Public Health Commissioner Dr. Allison Arwady, health officials will check a traveler's social media accounts if they believe a person was recently in one of the states that require them to quarantine for 14 days. Any social media postings could be used as evidence to issue a citation, NBC Chicago reported.
"One of the easiest ways to sort of get enough proof that there was the potential of a violated quarantine order without me having to send out an inspector or do any sort of more aggressive follow up to collect that is to look at social media," Arwady explained.
Fines range from $100 to $500 a day, USA Today reported. It's not clear how many citations, if any, have been issued.
Although this is a technique Chicago is planning to use, Arwady said this isn't Big Brother watching people.
"We do not have somebody dedicated to sitting and watching social media feeds," she explained "We're absolutely not doing that."
"I don't want to like overemphasize that we're somehow Big Brother in monitoring people's social accounts - we're absolutely not doing that," Arwady said. "But where we already have a concern, it's one of the easiest ways to identify people who are not just breaking the travel order but flaunting it publicly."

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