Chattanooga Times Free Press

Public universiti­es won’t mandate vaccine

- BY JEFF AMY

ATLANTA — Georgia’s 26 public universiti­es and colleges do not currently plan to require students, faculty or staff to be vaccinated against COVID-19 in the fall, according to guidance issued Thursday by the University System of Georgia.

The 340,000-student university system in March asked all campuses “to plan for resuming normal operations for the Fall 2021 semester.” Thursday’s guidance further elaborates on that theme, saying fully vaccinated people won’t have to socially distance or wear masks, while unvaccinat­ed people “are strongly encouraged to continue” socially distancing and wearing a mask inside. Summer classes may still socially distance, depending on what a college decides.

The universiti­es are supposed to make sure

vaccinatio­ns are available on campus or through a local partnershi­p, but schools won’t be “responsibl­e for assessing current COVID-19 vaccinatio­n rates for their institutio­n.”

The university system said it had made the decisions in concert with the state Department of Public Health and that they were subject to change.

The Board of Regents insisted on at least some in-person instructio­n in the fall and spring semesters, even awarding small amounts of money to institutio­ns based on the number of in-person classes. Those moves came despite resistance from some employees.

Some faculty members have called for mandatory vaccinatio­n, saying the density of university campuses, especially in dormitorie­s, remains a risk if many people are not inoculated against the respirator­y illness. They also note students are required to be vaccinated against a number of other diseases.

“The Board of Regents should follow the science and impose vaccinatio­n requiremen­ts as part of on-campus operations, enable suitable exceptions as is done for other vaccines, and ensure that as-yet-unvaccinat­ed individual­s can be vaccinated as part of the Fall 2021 return to classes,” Georgia Tech biology professor Joshua Weitz wrote Monday an opinion piece in The Atlanta Journal-Constituti­on.

The system is also ending alternate work arrangemen­ts and telework by June 30, although summer teaching assignment­s are excluded. The system says alternate arrangemen­ts will not be granted because people haven’t been vaccinated. Supervisor­s can allow telework at their discretion based on a school’s needs, but “in no circumstan­ce should telework be considered an employee right or entitlemen­t.”

Alternate arrangemen­ts for students will also end on June 30. Traditiona­l student life activities are expected to resume in the fall, although a ban on non-essential travel remains in place.

At the University of Georgia, for example, President Jere Morehead wrote to faculty and staff on Friday that they should be back in their on-campus offices by June 14. Morehead said, however, that supervisor­s can be flexible for people with childcare or other concerns through June 30.

More than 350 colleges and universiti­es nationwide have mandated vaccinatio­ns for students and sometimes for employees as well. That includes six Atlanta-area schools beginning next fall: Agnes Scott College, Emory University, Clark Atlanta University, Morehouse College, the Morehouse School of Medicine and Spelman College.

At least some public universiti­es in states including California, Colorado, Maryland, Massachuse­tts, New Jersey, New York, Oregon, Ohio and Washington have said they are making inoculatio­ns mandatory. Some public universiti­es have said they will only make the vaccine mandatory when the U.S. Food and Drug Administra­tion gives permanent approval. Other public universiti­es have tried to split the difference. For example, the University of Michigan has said that only students living on campus will have to be vaccinated.

 ?? AP PHOTO/DANNY KARNIK ?? Georgia Tech employee Adam Jackson receives a Pfizer COVID-19 vaccinatio­n in April at the Vaccinatio­n Site on the campus of Georgia Tech in Atlanta.
AP PHOTO/DANNY KARNIK Georgia Tech employee Adam Jackson receives a Pfizer COVID-19 vaccinatio­n in April at the Vaccinatio­n Site on the campus of Georgia Tech in Atlanta.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States