UMASS UPDATES REOPENING PLANS
NEW PROTOCOLS FOR TESTING AND QUARANTINE
Source: UMass News and Media
UMass will implement new testing and quarantine protocols as well as a pledge, required of all students, to engage in healthy behaviors, when students return in a few weeks. Classes are slated to begin on August 24. Most classes will be held remotely. About 7000 students are expected to be in-residence on campus. UMass did not provide an estimate of the number of students who will return to live off-campus. In a typical year, 8000-8500 students usually live off campus.
Chancellor Kumble R. Subbaswamy said of the emerging plan, “I want to emphasize that UMass is using the best science and public health information available to protect the health of our community. We view that community as both our campus as well as the Town of Amherst and its surrounding towns. We are committed to ongoing collaboration with all segments our campus community and our neighbors to meet the unprecedented challenges that the COVID-19 pandemic has created.”
The Chancellor reiterated that life on campus during fall 2020 will not be anything resembling normal college life. “The public health risk from the pandemic is real,” he said. “We believe the extensive public health measures we are taking are the best path forward to educate our students. I am hopeful our extensive planning, and our community’s vigilance and commitment to public health, will lead to a full semester of education on campus this fall. However, we all recognize that a high incidence of COVID-19 could develop during the semester, and we may be forced to shift to an entirely remote mode of operation, with the closure of residence halls and campus facilities.”
Systematic Testing
UMass plans to implement wide-ranging testing protocols to protect the health and safety of the community, adopting practices that go well beyond federal and state recommendations. For instance, the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention currently do not recommend testing of asymptomatic individuals without known exposure to a person with COVID-19. However, in these unprecedented times, the university is committed to spending millions for additional testing, plus investments in staffing, because it believes they will produce valuable data upon which it can act promptly to safeguard public health.
UMass intends to test all students, whether living on or off campus, prior to their arrival or shortly after their arrival on campus or to the Amherst area.
Classes are scheduled to start on Aug 24. Most classes will be held online and about 7000 students are expected to be in residence on campus. UMass provided no estimate of how many students are expected to return to live off campus.
Students tested prior to arrival must show proof of a negative test taken within the previous 72 hours. In addition, students arriving from 42 states identified by Governor Baker must self-quarantine for 14 days. The university will offer quarantine space for these students if needed, whether they live in residence halls or off campus.
The university then intends to conduct weekly surveillance testing of all students living in residence halls as well as off-campus students who have face-to-face classes or a campus meal plan. To further monitor the off-campus population, and students in residence halls, additional adaptive testing of specific populations will be conducted.
Symptomatic monitoring and testing will occur throughout the semester. Students will conduct a daily self-screening, and those with any COVID-19 symptoms, living either on or off-campus, will be expected to report them. They will be tested at University Health Services and related contact tracing will occur in coordination with Town of Amherst health officials, a procedure already in place.
For on-campus students, the university will provide isolation and quarantine space. Students who are residents of Amherst are required to create their own isolation and quarantine plan, with return to their home community the recommended option whenever possible.
For employees, on-campus work will look different —with the university exploring different options to lessen the spread of the novel coronavirus. Importantly, many staff members will be asked to continue to work remotely through the end of the calendar year.
Symptomatic monitoring through a daily self-screening and related testing will continue for employees who work on campus, following the process in place since March for on-site workers. The university has been having ongoing discussions about its reopening with the various labor unions that represent employees, and the university expects additional protocols will be in place that support asymptomatic testing.
An Articulation of Students’ Responsibility
As students return to the region, the new UMass Amherst Community Agreement is designed to play an important role in protecting the health and safety of the members of our community with whom they interact. The Agreement relies on all members of the campus community doing their part to protect the health and wellbeing of themselves and others.
All students coming to campus, whether they live on or off campus, are required to sign the Agreement. Off-campus students living in the Amherst area will be required to provide the university a local address, which will improve contact tracing. Students engaged in remote learning, who choose not to return to campus or the surrounding area, are encouraged to sign the Agreement as well.
To underscore the importance of this initiative, the university will launch a comprehensive public education campaign about its importance and the responsible behaviors that we expect of all our students, wherever they reside.
Subbaswamy said this approach will draw upon successful outreach initiatives that UMass has in place as well as university-town partnerships. These include proactive outreach from university officials, Amherst Police and Amherst Inspections to off-campus students; outreach to Amherst residents and landlords; follow-up on noise and nuisance calls; party registration; on-call meetings with public safety officials; and rigorous health and safety enforcement by the Town.
Education and prevention will be the most effective strategies. In addition, as UMass has done over the past six years, it will supplement its partnership and outreach initiatives by continuing to apply relevant campus policies, including the Code of Student Conduct, to persistent or egregious violations of the Agreement.
Ongoing updates on the implementation process can be found on the UMass Amherst reopening website, which provides the latest news and FAQs on a number of topics.