Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Serious COVID-19 outbreaks hit California colleges despite intense preparatio­n

- Los Angeles Times (TNS)

LOS ANGELES – This fall, as colleges around the country wrestled with how to reopen amid the coronaviru­s crisis, officials in California required a cautious approach. Classes were put online, isolation rooms were set up on campus, and restrictio­ns were placed on the number of students permitted to live in dormitorie­s or come on campus.

But what deans and provosts couldn’t control were the thousands of students who returned to fill apartments and houses in neighborho­ods surroundin­g their schools, determined to salvage some semblance of a college experience.

Unchecked by campus rules and safeguards, these students became fertile ground for the virus, which has spread rapidly on and around several California campuses despite sparsely populated dormitorie­s and classrooms. From San Diego to Chico, the outbreaks have thrown universiti­es into crisis mode as they scramble to slow the virus’ spread with tighter restrictio­ns and attempts to cajole students into safer behavior.

With so many students living in close quarters and often pressing ahead with parties and other gatherings that disregard social distancing guidelines, some experts said school officials’ hopes of keeping the virus at bay with remote learning were unrealisti­c.

“I think it’s inevitable that colleges are risky environmen­ts,” said Kirsten Bibbins-domingo, chair of UC San Francisco’s Department of Epidemiolo­gy and Biostatist­ics.

“One of the essential elements of college in general is that you have a bunch of people who have not been with each other, traveling and coming together in one location, living in an environmen­t in close quarters and generally having an experience where interactin­g with one another is an essential feature,” she said.

At Cal Poly San Luis Obispo, where more than 130 people have been infected with the virus since the start of the school year, officials last week were left pleading with students not to gather in large groups after video of a raucous and tightly packed beach party surfaced.

Fewer than 2,500 students at

San Diego State University were allowed to live in on-campus dorms and only about 6,240 students are taking in-person classes _ slivers of the 35,485 students enrolled at the school. But while school administra­tors implemente­d a widespread testing strategy for students on campus, required anyone who tested positive to quarantine in isolation wards, and reorganize­d dorms to give everyone their own room, they were powerless to force students living off campus to participat­e in the safety requiremen­ts.

The virus took hold. University officials announced 120 new cases on Sept. 4 and in less than a week that number had more than quadrupled to 509 cases. The school paused in-person classes, but cases have continued to mount. As of

Oct. 5, the university had reported more than 1,110 confirmed infections with more than 50% of them connected to students living off campus.

“You can’t isolate, as if it’s on an island, a campus community that’s part of a larger community,” Gov. Gavin Newsom said recently when asked whether the university’s high number of infections should count against San Diego County’s efforts to reopen.

It was a similar scene at Chico State University in Northern California, where officials cut the number of students living on campus from about 2,200 to 750 in hopes that returning students would not spread the illness in a county that had seen relatively few cases. But about 10,000 students took up residence in a one-mile radius around the school.

The first cases of the coronaviru­s among Chico students arose in early August before the start of classes, and the situation got worse from there. By the end of the month, in-person classes were halted and students were told to leave campus after 30 people contracted the virus. In the weeks since, the number of cases has ballooned to more than 190, with two-thirds linked to off-campus students.

“It’s such a wild card for us – it’s a wild card for any college town,” Debra Larson, provost and vice president for academic affairs at Chico State, said of the thousands of students living off campus. “You can tell them, ‘Don’t come,’ of course. But they were coming.”

In California, schools’ reopening plans have been guided largely by a tiered rating system the state has devised to measure the prevalence of the virus in a particular county. A university in a county that remains mired in the first tier, where risk of infection remains high, would not be allowed to resume in-person classes _ with the exception of certain classes such as labs or studio work _ while a school in a county that had progressed to a higher tier could.

As schools reopen, the virus continues to hit campuses in waves. Cal State Long Beach recorded at least 22 cases more than a month after the school reopened. UC Berkeley, which has reported more than 225 cases, is considerin­g a plan to more fully close off the campus from the public. Under the plan, university employees would monitor visitors and check their reasons for coming to the school.

 ?? Los Angeles Times/tns ?? Over 300 unmasked people including college students were seen partying in Isla Vista, near the campus of UC Santa Barbara, on the evenings of Friday, Aug. 28 and Saturday, Aug. 29. Community members and university officials have been concerned about the spread of COVID-19 in Isla Vista.
Los Angeles Times/tns Over 300 unmasked people including college students were seen partying in Isla Vista, near the campus of UC Santa Barbara, on the evenings of Friday, Aug. 28 and Saturday, Aug. 29. Community members and university officials have been concerned about the spread of COVID-19 in Isla Vista.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States