Skip to contents
Pilsen, Little Village, Back of the Yards

Want To Help South And West Side Families At Risk For Coronavirus? Here’s How To Volunteer

We Got Us, a collaborative of South and West side groups, needs help delivering masks and answering a community hotline.

Organizers, including Tanya Lozano (far right) are helping pack care packages for people in need.
Instagram
  • Credibility:

PILSEN — An initiative aimed at helping South and West Side residents most at risk for coronavirus is looking for volunteers.

We Got Us, a collaborative of South and West side groups, needs help assembling personal protective equipment kits, delivering protective kits and groceries and answering calls via a community hotline.

Organizers put out the call for volunteers over the busy Memorial Day weekend.

People who want to volunteer can sign up here.

Tanya Lozano, founder of Pilsen-based Healthy Hood, previously told Block Club that We Got Us aims to meet short-term needs in historically underserved communities where the rates of coronavirus infection are high but resources can be difficult to find. 

RELATED: We Got Us Organizers Team Up To Deliver Coronavirus Care Packages, Staff Hotline For Black And Brown Neighborhoods

Pilsen-based Health Hood, Ashley Smith, radio personality Hot Rod of Power 92, Ballinois, Babes Only and Project Swish are among the organizers behind the collaborative. 

Black and Brown communities have been overwhelmed by the coronavirus outbreak. In April, city officials said more than 70 percent of people who have died from coronavirus in Chicago were Black.

RELATED: Black Chicagoans Are Dying Of Coronavirus More Than Everyone Else: ‘This Is Unacceptable,’ Mayor Says

Belmont Cragin, Little Village, West Lawn and Brighton Park, all Latino neighborhoods, had the highest number of COVID-19 cases in the state of Illinois.

Communities of color were already combating systemic health disparities before the outbreak, but the virus has brought those inequities front and center, Lozano said.

Related: Chicago’s Latino Neighborhoods Have Most Coronavirus Cases In The State. Is The City Doing Enough To Respond?

Lozano said the current health crisis makes it even more crucial for city and state officials to pay attention to the health inequalities that have long impacted Black and Brown communities across Chicago.

“We know that COVID-19 is not the killer of our community — inequality is. That’s why we are dying more than anyone else,” Lozano said.  “We are essential workers. We don’t have as much access to testing or healthcare, and the education specific to COVID-19 [has] not trickled down to our communities.” 

While We Got Us looks to serve an immediate need for people in the South and West Sides, Lozano said the ultimate goal is to fix the “broken system” that has resulted in health inequities that continue to harm Black and Brown communities. 

Individuals looking to volunteer can sign up here.

People who need help can call the We Got Us COVID hotline at 773-839-9782.

Block Club Chicago’s coronavirus coverage is free for all readers. Block Club is an independent, 501(c)(3), journalist-run newsroom.

Subscribe to Block Club Chicago. Every dime we make funds reporting from Chicago’s neighborhoods.

Already subscribe? Click here to support Block Club with a tax-deductible donation.