The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

HOW STATE COLLEGES ARE PREPARING FOR THE FALL

State schools expect in-person classes, residence halls and dining facilities to be at capacity.

- By Eric Stirgus eric.stirgus@ajc.com

Several public universiti­es in Georgia are discussing plans for a full return to classes and campus living for the fall semester, anticipati­ng their campuses will be safer for students and employees because of expanded availabili­ty to the COVID-19 vaccine.

“(The availabili­ty) should allow us to resume normal operations in the Fall Semester, including a return to full in-person instructio­n, full capacity in our residence halls and dining facilities, and regular operations for other campus services,” University of Georgia officials said in a message Wednesday to students, employees and faculty. “All research and public service operations are also expected to resume regular activities no later than Fall 2021.”

Georgia State University President Mark Becker wrote Wednesday it plans to have “a full complement of in-person classes” and “a fully populated residentia­l community and campuses that provide the usual student services, activities, events and recreation­al opportunit­ies.”

Georgia Tech President Ángel Cabrera told parents the school is preparing for “full operations and a complete residentia­l experience for our students this fall.”

The messages from the Georgia universiti­es included few additional details about the fall plans. They note the plans could change and that students and employees should continue to follow campus guidelines concerning social distancing.

President Joe Biden said earlier this week he hopes to have enough vaccine for all American adults by the end of May. The fall semester for University System of

Georgia schools typically begins in early August.

University System leaders said after recent discussion­s with state health officials they asked all campuses to plan for resuming normal operations for the fall semester. System spokesman Aaron Diamant said they will continue to consult with those officials in the coming months.

University System leaders pushed for its schools to reopen

for the fall semester, citing emails they received from students and parents saying they want to be on campus and data showing students on campus perform better academical­ly. Faculty members have been more critical about in-person instructio­n, worried not enough COVID19 testing was being done or offered. They also want the System to allow employees to work remotely without requiring various forms of administra­tive approval to do so.

University of North Georgia professor Matt Boedy, who is Georgia conference president of the American Associatio­n of University Professors, suggested the schools are discussing fall plans as “a selling point” to prospectiv­e students. He said the key for fall return plans will be vigilance and expanding vaccine eligibilit­y now to college employees. The United Campus Workers of Georgia, a union of system staffers, echoed those demands Wednesday.

Georgia is expanding vaccine eligibilit­y to teachers on March 8, but professors and others in the state’s higher education system are not in that expansion.

Richelle Brown, 39, a University of North Georgia graduate student who is a member of the organizati­on, said she wants to see more data about infection rates from classroom settings before supporting the system’s fall plans. She also believes more planning is needed with the input of system employees.

“It seems like we’re jumping the gun a little bit,” Brown said.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States