Lake County Record-Bee

FACULTY, STUDENTS GETTING VACCINES

California colleges likely won’t require immunizati­on

- By Matthew Reagan, Zaeem Shaikh, Shehreen Karim, Ryan Loyola, Elena Shao and Mallika Seshadri

In mid-January, science education professor Al Schademan received one of around 2,000 emails sent to faculty, student employees and essential staff at California State University, Chico. The email contained a surprise for Schademan: He would be among the first higher education employees in California to gain coveted access to the coronaviru­s vaccine.

Within a couple weeks, Schademan was climbing a back stairway at the 298-bed Enloe Medical Center, where in a room above the hospital cafe he received his first shot of the Pfizer vaccine, an adventure

he said felt like participat­ing in a covert operation.

Getting vaccinated was a relief, said Schademan, who’s now considerin­g teaching in-person in the fall.

“I’m just hopeful we can get back to normal, because

staring at a computer all day is not fun,” he said.

Chico State is one of at least three California State University campuses offering the coronaviru­s vaccine to faculty, staff or student employees. Other California colleges may soon follow as the state’s vaccine

rollout continues and supply increases. But most colleges and universiti­es say they’re not likely to require members of the campus community to be vaccinated — even as they plan to ramp up inperson learning.

Educators qualify for vaccine prioritiza­tion in the current 1B phase of California’s vaccine rollout. Vaccine availabili­ty varies by county, however, meaning some colleges have been able to begin immunizati­ons while others still await guidance from local health officials. Vaccinatio­n is key to colleges’ reopening plans given previous coronaviru­s outbreaks fueled by students gathering in dorms and off-campus housing. On Monday, the state will began transition­ing to a new vaccine distributi­on system overseen by

health insurer Blue Shield, which officials say will create more consistenc­y among counties.

Chico State was able to vaccinate faculty and staff because the local Butte County Public Health Department has moved swiftly through the vaccinatio­n process. The county is on track to finish vaccinatin­g K-12 employees in March, and has also offered doses to instructor­s at Butte College and technical schools, said communicat­ions manager Lisa Almaguer.

Besides faculty, Chico State decided to offer doses of the vaccine to frontline student employees such as lifeguards and resident advisors, said Mike Guzzi, director of the university’s emergency operations center. “They’re mingling with large population­s, and we wanted to give them the opportunit­y to be vaccinated,” he said.

California State University, Long Beach began offering vaccine appointmen­ts February 2 at their Walter Pyramid parking lot vaccine center. More than 2,000 campus community members had received both shots of the vaccine as of February 22, according to the university’s vaccine dashboard. The city of Long Beach has its own public health department, a fact that has allowed it to distribute vaccines quickly and efficientl­y, said Mayor Robert Garcia.

CSU and University of California campuses are also helping distribute vaccines to the wider community. Eleven of the 23 CSU campuses have on-site vaccinatio­n centers, and more are expected to come online within the next few weeks, according to CSU spokespers­on Mike Uhlenkamp. UC San Diego partnered with San Diego County on one of the state’s largest mass vaccinatio­n sites, adjacent to Petco Park in San Diego.

Colleges pass on vaccine mandate

While CSU and UC have said they will encourage students and staff to be vaccinated, they have no current plans to require it.

“Our focus is really to try to get the vaccines here to each campus and to inspire participat­ion,” CSU Chancellor Joseph Castro said at a Feb. 8 press conference with student media. “There may be some students for different reasons who decide they don’t wish to be vaccinated, or a staff or faculty member who doesn’t wish to do so. I’m going to respect that and really focus on trying to get as many people vaccinated as possible.”

Castro added that he wanted to avoid any legal issues that could accompany mandating a vaccine that has been approved by the Food and Drug Administra­tion for emergency use only.

The emergency use authorizat­ion — a rarity in U.S. history — is the main issue driving legal uncertaint­y around whether campuses can require the vaccine, said UC Hastings College of the Law professor Dorit Reiss. Some colleges already require other immunizati­ons for students who want to attend; UC, for example, made flu shots mandatory for students, faculty and staff last year.

If colleges do eventually decide to start mandating a COVID-19 vaccine, Reiss and other legal experts said, the requiremen­t could survive legal challenges by being narrowly tailored to protect public health and allowing individual­s to opt out for medical or religious reasons.

“The Civil Rights Act of 1964 does say you can’t discrimina­te in education based on religion, but that only requires accommodat­ion if the accommodat­ion is no more than a minimal burden,” Reiss said. “A university can say allowing students to bring in COVID-19, measles, influenza is more than a minimal burden. It can also say, ‘We’re offering an accommodat­ion. The accommodat­ion is if you don’t want to get the vaccine, take the course online.’”

At California State University, Sacramento, administra­tors considered requiring students to be vaccinated but changed course after hearing from the chancellor’s office, said Cely Smart, chief of staff to campus president Robert Nelsen.

“We initially thought that we would be able to (mandate the vaccine), especially for our student population, in the way that we do meningitis and some of the other immunizati­ons,” Smart said. CSU officials advised against that due to concerns about the emergency use authorizat­ion, Smart said. But if the vaccine is approved for nonemergen­cy use, Smart said, she believes the university would revisit that requiremen­t “pretty quickly.”

Sacramento State has been offering on-campus vaccines to employees on a voluntary basis since Feb. 16, Smart said.

In-person learning expands

As the vaccine rollout continues, a few California colleges are increasing the number of students attending class in-person in outdoor tents and even indoor classrooms. Their efforts provide a glimpse of what campus operations could look like statewide this fall.

At UC San Diego, about 2,200 students are taking classes in 50-person tents equipped with wifi, weatherpro­of speakers, podcasting equipment, whiteboard­s and display screens. The university began experiment­ing with in-person pandemic learning last fall, when 10% of its courses were offered faceto-face. Both students and faculty are required to wear face coverings, and seats are spaced at least six feet apart, said spokespers­on Leslie Sepuka.

Simon Poon, a freshman studying physics, heads for a tent each week to participat­e in an in-person discussion section, and says he likes it a lot better than Zoom. “I can see the person, so I’m more likely to ask questions,” he said. Though he sits six feet apart from classmates, they sometimes rotate their chairs toward each other for group work. “Even if I’m just working by myself, I still like to be with people,” he said.

The campus hasn’t seen any evidence of COVID-19 transmissi­on as a result of in-person classes, Sepuka said, and plans to add limited indoor instructio­n later this spring, with each class restricted to either 25% capacity or 50 students, whichever is smaller.

UC Berkeley also began offering indoor classes this week, despite a coronaviru­s outbreak earlier in the semester that saw students confined to their dorms. Classes will be capped at 26 students, said spokespers­on Janet Gilmore, with all students required to test weekly for COVID-19, complete a daily symptom screening and wear a mask. Students in the university’s Rausser College of Natural Resources are conducting outdoor labs, string ensembles are rehearsing al fresco, and engineerin­g students are attending outdoor meetings.

Stanford University said last week that it will bring juniors and seniors back to campus for the spring quarter that starts March 29, though most classes will remain online. “We believe our campus is prepared to respond effectivel­y to positive cases that occur,” Stanford President Marc Tessier-Levigne and Provost Persis Dell wrote in a message to students, according to the Stanford Daily. The move was opposed by Stanford’s student government, who argued bringing students back would place a heavier burden on local hospitals, citing a small uptick in Covid cases during the winter quarter and some students’ refusal to comply with safety measures.

 ?? PHOTOS BY RAHUL LAL FOR CALMATTERS ?? Sacramento State nursing student Amanda Clark fills a syringe with the COVID vaccine at Sacramento State’s University Union building on Jan. 29. Sac State nursing students participat­e in administer­ing vaccinatio­ns to faculty and nursing students.
PHOTOS BY RAHUL LAL FOR CALMATTERS Sacramento State nursing student Amanda Clark fills a syringe with the COVID vaccine at Sacramento State’s University Union building on Jan. 29. Sac State nursing students participat­e in administer­ing vaccinatio­ns to faculty and nursing students.
 ??  ?? An informatio­nal sign posted near the University Union building at Sacramento State.
An informatio­nal sign posted near the University Union building at Sacramento State.

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