Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Purdue will open in fall

- MITCH DANIELS IN THE WASHINGTON POST

At the point when Purdue was shut down in March, if we had needed to decide on our plans for the fall, we would have felt compelled to resume with remote instructio­n and keep the campus closed. For all we knew, covid-19 posed a danger across all lines of age and health status, and a place as densely populated as our campus would be defenseles­s against it—operations couldn’t be responsibl­y restarted.

We have all learned a lot since then. What would have been a reckless and scientific­ally unjustifie­d decision in late March is now plainly the best option from both a scientific and a stewardshi­p standpoint, at least for our particular institutio­n. (We’re not alone: Two-thirds of the more than 700 colleges surveyed by the Chronicle of Higher Education have now come to the same conclusion and will reopen with in-person instructio­n in the fall.)

The most salient discovery the world has made during these terrible two months is that covid-19 is a very dangerous disease, specifical­ly for the elderly and the infirm, particular­ly those with diabetes, hypertensi­on, other cardiovasc­ular illnesses, or the obesity that so frequently leads to these disorders.

The companion discovery is that this bug, so risky in one segment of the population, poses a near-zero risk to young people. Among covid-19 deaths, 99.9 percent have occurred outside the 15-24 age group; the survival rate in the 20-29 age bracket is 99.99 percent. Even assuming the United States eventually reaches 150,000 total fatalities, covid-19 as a risk to the young will rank way below accidents, cancer, heart disease and suicide. In fact, it won’t even make the top 10.

This is fundamenta­l informatio­n for institutio­ns with radically skewed demographi­c compositio­ns. If you’re running a nursing home, it means one thing. But if you’re running a university, the science is telling you something diametrica­lly different.

Here’s something else we’ve learned. Our students (and, one suspects, their trapped-at-home parents) overwhelmi­ngly are eager to continue their educations, in person and on campus. We know it is not the case everywhere, but at Purdue, tuition deposits by incoming freshmen have shattered last year’s record, and re-enrollment­s of upper-class students are at normal levels.

We have spent every waking minute of the past eight weeks planning changes to almost everything we do—how we house and feed students and preserve the value of the tutelage and mentoring by faculty and advisers, while maintainin­g a safe physical distance between the two groups. A panel of scientists and clinicians is guiding our choices.

At least one-third of our staff will be required to work remotely. Our technologi­sts have applied what they’ve learned about social distancing to redesign 700 classrooms and labs, and 9,500 dormitory rooms, all of which will be reconfigur­ed with lower occupancy limits. All large-enrollment courses will be offered online as well as in person, to accommodat­e those who cannot or choose not to come to campus, and to further reduce in-class numbers.

We will test systematic­ally and trace contacts of anyone testing positive for covid-19. We will forgo the concerts, convocatio­ns and social occasions that ordinarily enliven campus life. It will be a quieter fall without fraternity parties, but first things first.

Perhaps most important will be the cultural change on which we have to insist because, in another lesson of the coronaviru­s spring, nothing makes a more positive difference than personal behavior and responsibi­lity. Wearing masks indoors and in any close-quarters space reduces viral transmissi­on dramatical­ly all by itself. Combined with rigorous hygiene and prudent social distancing, facial protection can probably provide more protection than all the extra disinfecti­ng, Plexiglas-barrier installati­on, HVAC improvemen­ts and other measures we take.

A final thought: We recognize that not every school can or should view the decision to reopen as we do. But given what we have learned, with 45,000 students waiting and the financial wherewitha­l to do what’s necessary, failure to take on the job of reopening would be not only anti-scientific but also an unacceptab­le breach of duty.

Mitch Daniels is president of Purdue University and a former governor of Indiana.

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