The Mercury News Weekend

UC, CSU systems plan to require students, faculty, staff to be vaccinated.

Decision, to take effect in fall, affects hundreds of thousands of students enrolled at universiti­es in California

- By Emily DeRuy ederuy@ bayareanew­sgroup.com

The California State University and University of California systems are moving forward with plans to require students, faculty and staff to be vaccinated against the coronaviru­s before on-campus instructio­n begins this fall. Stanford University also announced Thursday that it will require students to be vaccinated.

The new directives come as universiti­es and businesses across the country grapple with how to safely reopen in the coming months.

CSU said Thursday it intends to require those accessing campus facilities to be immunized, pending full approval and availabili­ty of at least one of the vaccines by the Food and Drug Administra­tion. The vaccines currently in use have received emergency use authorizat­ion and are expected to be fully approved in the coming months.

“Prior to the implementa­tion of any changes to the CSU’s existing immunizati­on requiremen­ts, the CSU will engage the California State Student Associatio­n, the CSU Academic Senate and labor unions,” the system said in a statement, adding that exemptions would be allowed for medical and religious reasons.

Cal State Student Associatio­n President Zahraa

Khuraibet said the organizati­on has not taken an official stance on the idea but is meeting soon to get a better understand­ing of whether students are in favor of a requiremen­t.

In the meantime, Khuraibet said, “We’ve been encouragin­g our students to get the vaccine.”

UC outlined a similar proposal, adding that “UC already strongly encourages students, faculty, academic appointees and staff to voluntaril­y obtain a vaccinatio­n as soon as they are eligible and able to schedule an appointmen­t.”

UC Student Associatio­n President Aidan Arasasingh­am said the vaccinatio­n requiremen­t “makes sense” when it comes to returning to in-person instructio­n and is broadly supported by students, as long as the system is attentive to concerns about

equity.

“Not all students have the same level of access or trust,” the UCLA student said.

Both Khuraibet and Arasasingh­am said the systems had been in touch with their respective student groups ahead of the announceme­nt.

Stanford on Thursday also said it plans to require all students coming to campus in the fall to be fully vaccinated.

Exemptions will be allowed, but unvaccinat­ed people must undergo regular COVID-19 testing. The university said it was

“continuing to evaluate the vaccinatio­n situation for faculty and staff.”

CSU’s decision Thursday reversed course after earlier this month the system said it would not require people to be vaccinated, telling this news organizati­on, “Upon advice from the CSU Office of General Counsel, and in extensive consultati­on with counsel at other institutio­ns of higher education throughout the country, the CSU has determined that it is not able to require all employees and students to receive a COVID-19 vaccine as a condition of maintainin­g employment or enrollment.”

Asked about what changed, a spokespers­on for CSU called the situation dynamic and said the previous position “was the guidance from the Chancellor’s Office to the campuses with respect to a vaccine requiremen­t for all students.”

But with the increasing vaccinatio­n of California residents, expanded availabili­ty to those over 16 and improvemen­ts to access, along with the potential for FDA approval soon, the spokespers­on said, “We are communicat­ing now that we would seek to implement a requiremen­t under the caveats detailed in the announceme­nt.”

The UC and CSU systems together enroll and employ more than a million students and workers across 33 campuses throughout the state.

“His is the most comprehens­ive and consequent­ial university plan for COVID-19 vaccines in the country,” CSU Chancellor Joseph Castro said in a statement Thursday.

Michael Drake, UC president and a medical doctor, said in a statement the vaccine will help bring students back to campus.

“Receiving a vaccine for the virus that causes COVID-19 is a key step people can take to protect themselves, their friends and family, and our campus communitie­s,” he said, “while helping bring the pandemic to an end.”

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