The Mercury News

Students want answers after commenceme­nt halted by heat

- By Gregory Yee

Days after UC Davis officials cut short an outdoor commenceme­nt ceremony amid excessive heat that sickened dozens of people, students say the university showed dangerous mismanagem­ent, poor planning and a lack of accountabi­lity.

Several students reached out to The Times sharing concerns, including delays that pushed the June 10 ceremony into the heat of the day, a lack of water, and a ban on shade umbrellas and outside drinks.

Radhika Gawde, the incoming president of the Associated Students of UC Davis, said she and other student government representa­tives have been compiling students' concerns.

Heat in excess of the forecast may have been out of the university's control, Gawde said, but communicat­ion with students and families has been lacking.

“If it's held outdoors, I think that's fine as long as adequate precaution­s are taken into account,” Gawde said. “All I ask for is communicat­ion. … We just don't want anyone to end up in the hospital.”

For Mairéad Ryan, a UC Davis student who graduated this year, the ceremony felt “like a last straw” after several frustratio­ns during her undergradu­ate experience.

Ryan and other students said the decision to hold a larger outdoor ceremony combining multiple colleges caused delays even though students started checking in at 6 a.m. Friday.

Students did not start walking until after 10 a.m., according to the accounts shared with The Times.

By then, the temperatur­e was 88 degrees, climbing to 90 degrees an hour later.

There were 36 heat-related medical calls and seven people were hospitaliz­ed, Julia Ann Easley, a university spokespers­on, said. Most of the medical calls were for heat-related illness.

Ryan's mother, Jennifer, said the heat and delays in the ceremony had her worried about her 86-year-old father, who is a skin cancer survivor. It was dangerous for him to sit out in the sun unprotecte­d.

She left to get a ride to the parking lot for people with disabiliti­es but found that the drivers were gone, having been told to return after the ceremony ended. A police officer called a driver back, and by the time Jennifer Ryan left with her father and his wife, at least 50 people were waiting behind them.

For some, the commenceme­nt problems echoed past health and safety concerns at UC Davis. Ryan said many students had already lost faith in university leadership, pointing to administra­tors' decision to hold classes amid smoky conditions from the 2018 Camp Fire before reversing course, and a delay in moving classes online in 2020 at the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic.

“My goal is not to bash my school, but to hold the people in charge accountabl­e and make the school better for the students still there,” Ryan said.

Paige Petschl, who graduated in the June 10 ceremony, said UC Davis leaders “truly failed the Class of 2022.”

“No graduation ceremony should result in medical emergencie­s due to heat stroke,” Petschl said.

Students were not provided shade, fans or cold water, and many waited at least 15 minutes for lukewarm water rather than line up to walk in “unbearable” heat, Petschlsai­d.

In statements, Easley and UC Davis Chancellor Gary S. May said organizers planned for hot weather with cooling stations, misters, fans, water and a livestream in the air-conditione­d University Credit Union Center, but accounts from those at the graduation ceremonies suggested many were not aware of the alternativ­e venue.

Officials also hoped they would avoid ill effects from the heat by starting early.

However, the temperatur­e “rose earlier than expected,” May said.

Water supplies ran low with no way to quickly restock, he said, and with many students still waiting to walk, firefighte­rs and other public safety officials ended the ceremony “at once to avoid further crisis.”

“Again, I want to acknowledg­e the disappoint­ment that some of you have voiced on what should have been a time of celebratio­n,” May said.

Gawde, the student government president, said she started reaching out to administra­tors immediatel­y after hearing that the June 10 ceremony was cut short.

“I pretty much had two priorities — fix what had happened for Friday's graduates and make sure Saturday and Sunday went smoothly,” Gawde said.

She said administra­tors agreed to refund the $58 that each graduate spent for required caps, gowns and tassels. The refund is available to students who didn't walk June 10 or 11.

The June 11 ceremony saw four medical requests, none for heat-related illness, said Easley, the university spokespers­on.

In order to speed up the second day of commenceme­nt, administra­tors originally planned not to have students walk before reversing that decision about 20 minutes before the ceremony. By that time, many students had left, assuming they couldn't walk.

“While we did our best to mitigate against the rising temperatur­es on Friday morning, I know it was not enough,” May said. “I apologize for the pain, anger and frustratio­n many of you have experience­d and expressed.”

He said officials were working on a survey to gauge the timing of a makeup commenceme­nt for students who weren't able to walk.

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