Trustees of the village of Orland Park, a municipality in Chicago’s Cook County suburb, voted on Dec. 28 not to enforce the county’s COVID-19 vaccine passport requirement for some businesses. At a special meeting of the Orland Park Village Board of Trustees, officials voted 6–0 in favor of a resolution that opposes Cook County’s vaccination passport mandate, according to CBS Chicago. The mandate, issued just before Christmas by the Cook County Department of Public Health, calls for proof of vaccination from customers of indoor settings like restaurants, fitness clubs, and entertainment venues. The mitigation order, which threatens to impose fines on non-compliant businesses, goes into effect on Jan. 3—but not in Orland Park. “We have allowed our businesses a choice in how they wish to handle COVID-19,” trustee Michael R. Milani told Chicago news outlet WGN9. “So thus I will not support this attempt at government overreach of basically forcing vaccination, …