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Photograph: Nathan Stirk/Getty ImagesPeople with learning disabilities have been given do not resuscitate orders during the second wave of the pandemic, in spite of widespread condemnation of the practice last year and an urgent investigation by the care watchdog.Mencap said it had received reports in January from people with learning disabilities that they had been told they would not be resuscitated if they were taken ill with Covid 19.The Care Quality Commission said in December that inappropriate Do Not Attempt Cardiopulmonary Resuscitation (DNACPR) notices had caused potentially avoidable deaths last year.DNACPRs are usually made for people who are too frail to benefit from CPR, but Mencap said some seem to have been issued for people simply because they had a learning disability. The CQC is due to publish a report on the practice within weeks.The disclosure comes as campaigners put growing pressure on ministers to reconsider a decision not to give people with learning disabilities priority for vaccinations. There is growing evidence that even those with a mild disability are more likely to die if they contract the coronavirus.Although some people with learning disabilities such as Down’s syndrome were in one of four groups set by the Joint Committee on Vaccination and Immunisation (JCVI) which the government promised would be offered the vaccine by tomorrow, many were classified lower categories of need and are still waiting.NHS figures released last week show that in the five weeks since the third lockdown began, Covid 19 accounted for 65% of deaths of people with learning disabilities.

It was a very difficult decision for me to change my vote from opposing the earlier version in July to supporting the revised proposal, but I felt that the changes to the proposal reduced enough of the negative impacts on the James Madison Park neighborhood to allow it to meet the standards of approval that Plan Commission must follow. That said, the disconnect remains apparent between the desires of many neighbors (affordable housing, a shorter building) and the vision laid out in the Downtown Plan, the City’s Comprehensive Plan, and zoning, but Plan Commission’s standards of approval focus a great deal on a proposal’s alignment with the city’s plans. District 6 Alder Marshal Rummel was the lone no vote; I greatly respect her concern for the demolition of the buildings on the site and the negative impacts on the neighborhood..