Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

UA CANCELS spring break trips to affected nations.

It calls off excursions to any country with CDC Level 2 or higher alerts

- JAIME ADAME

FAYETTEVIL­LE — Spring break trips for students to Scotland and India have been canceled by the University of Arkansas, Fayettevil­le out of “an abundance of caution” as a response to concerns about the covid-19 illness, said university spokeswoma­n Amy Unruh.

The university also is requiring an immediate return to the U.S. for students in Japan and all countries that have a U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Level 2 coronaviru­s alert, which asks travelers to “practice enhanced precaution­s.”

In Arkansas, no one has tested positive for the illness. Two people are candidates for testing, a state Department of Health spokesman said Wednesday.

No decisions have been made about future UA-led student travel scheduled for after the spring semester, Unruh said.

Max McKeown, a horticultu­re major from Monticello, said he hopes to complete a summer internship at the University of Padua, roughly 30 miles from Venice, Italy.

“As it stands, I don’t know if I would go right now. But if the cases decrease, and it was still a presence over there, I would probably still go,” said McKeown, 21.

McKeown said he’s not sure if he’ll have that option, however. He said he’s waiting for a mid-March update from the Italian university about airfare.

Travelers are now being advised by the CDC to avoid nonessenti­al travel to Italy. UA, citing the CDC’s Level 3 alert for that country, on Friday shut down for the semester its Rome Center, which had 100 students in attendance — 40 from UA and 60 from other schools.

The latest restrictio­ns, announced Tuesday by UA, also cite the CDC.

The requiremen­t to return to the U.S. applies to students in countries with Level 2 or higher CDC coronaviru­s alerts.

It technicall­y affects nearly 20 students in exchange programs or enrolled at “partner” institutio­ns in programs not managed by UA, Unruh said. But she said that number also includes students notified as early as January about CDC travel warnings.

“All registered students in the affected areas have been informed, and many of them are already back in the United States or planning to be shortly,” Unruh said Wednesday in an email.

On Tuesday, UA also announced the postponeme­nt of student travel to countries with Level 2 or higher CDC coronaviru­s alerts, a list that as of Wednesday included five countries: four with a Level 3 warning (China, Iran, South Korea and Italy) and one, Japan, with a Level 2 alert.

While neither the United Kingdom nor India — the planned destinatio­ns for the canceled spring break trips — have such warnings, Unruh said “both events expect internatio­nal participat­ion” and so, “in an abundance of caution,” have been canceled.

She cited the restrictio­ns announced Tuesday, when UA announced that it was urging “all those who have plans to travel during Spring Break to consider the latest CDC and Department of State guidance.”

The latest spring break travel cancellati­ons to India and Scotland will affect fewer than 25 students who had signed up to travel, Unruh said. Fifteen of those students are seeking their master’s degrees in business administra­tion and were traveling to India.

On Tuesday, UA also said “we strongly recommend” that faculty members traveling abroad return, and that faculty members suspend future internatio­nal travel “at least until the end of the current academic semester.”

Beyond that time frame, the university is “currently reviewing the status of all summer programs,” the Tuesday announceme­nt said. UA cited a CDC recommenda­tion about student foreign travel, which asks that colleges “consider postponing or canceling student foreign exchange programs.”

McKeown, the UA horticultu­re student, said he hopes UA will wait to make any decisions that could affect his opportunit­y to spend a summer in Italy. An Italian minor, McKeown said he wants to be “fully immersed” in the language while doing research at a university with “a really great horticultu­re program.”

“This was supposed to take care of my internship requiremen­t for my degree,” McKeown said, adding that, as of now, there are “just a lot of unknowns.”

Rhodora Vennarucci, an assistant professor of classics and art history at UA, is one of three directors of a multi-institutio­n summer research project that involves excavation fieldwork at a site in the southern Tuscany region of Italy.

“We will not go if the travel advisories remain elevated as they are because our student safety is of primary importance,” Vennarucci said.

She said no decision will be made about the summer program until the start of April.

“That’s important for giving us enough time and also students enough time to make plans for the summer. If, however, the situation does change for the better, that gives us enough time to still make travel arrangemen­ts,” Vennarucci said.

The original plan was for 10-12 students to arrive there in June and spend about a month working on the Marzuolo Archaeolog­ical Project, which explores artifacts relating to rural life and community craft-making.

“We received applicatio­ns actually past the [March 1] due date,” Vennarucci said. “Students found out about the program recently, within the context of coronaviru­s, and were still interested in submitting applicatio­n materials.”

Applicants are not from one particular school or even country, but they include students from UA and the University of Arkansas at Little Rock, Vennarucci said.

The University of Arkansas board of trustees is meeting today in Little Rock to review actions taken by campuses in the university system in response to the illness and future “preparedne­ss options,” according to a UA System announceme­nt.

Unruh said that while no decision has been made about summer study abroad programs generally, the university has canceled its summer Classics in Italy program because of low enrollment.

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