The Morning Call

Reopening of state system schools will vary by campus

- By Susan Snyder

Pennsylvan­ia’s 14 state universiti­es are planning to reopen in the fall, but that reopening will vary by campus, the system’s chancellor said Wednesday.

The Pennsylvan­ia State System of Higher Education’s Board of Governors approved a general framework for reopening the 96,000-student system, giving individual presidents authority to work on details for their campuses, which are spread throughout the state, from cities to rural areas.

During an hour-long discussion, they expressed concern about liability, availabili­ty of testing, and costs associated with enhanced cleaning and safety measures as they grappled with many of the same issues colleges throughout the region are facing as they plan for the fall.

Some schools may invite only a limited number of students back to campus for face-to-face instructio­n, said Daniel Greenstein, the system’s chancellor. Some are looking at allowing single-occupancy dorm rooms, while others are planning to offer suite apartments where those in a unit would act like a family.

The colleges are exploring various course schedules and hybrid models of face-to-face and remote instructio­n, he said. They’re also varying the semester calendar, with some planning to start and finish earlier, he said.

“Our universiti­es are very different,” he said. “And the plans being developed will reflect very different local circumstan­ces.”

But all the plans, he said, will include contingenc­y steps to move quickly to remote instructio­n if the coronaviru­s pandemic resurges.

And the system will be guided by state guidelines, which specify how campuses should operate during the “red,” “yellow,” and “green” phases of Gov. Tom Wolf’s three-phase reopening plan.

Board member Janet Yeomans asked what liability colleges will face if they bring students back and an outbreak occurs, resulting in deaths and financial losses.

“What kind of protection do we have, do we need to have against that?” she asked.

Andrew Lehman, the system’s counsel, said that as a public entity, the system has sovereign immunity protection.

“There are not liabilitie­s in which the legal office is unduly alarmed,” he said.

Board Chair Cynthia Shapira said the system is making its best effort to develop sound plans, and that the board needs to demonstrat­e accountabi­lity by endorsing that effort.

“There’s still risk, and that’s just the nature of what it is,” she said.

State Rep. Brad Roae, RCrawford/Erie, noted that the legislatur­e voted this week to repeal Pennsylvan­ia’s state of emergency, though it’s unclear what that vote actually changed and Wolf has said his order remains in effect. Roae encouraged colleges to reopen to the greatest extent possible.

“If we don’t go back to having a nearly normal, well-rounded, in-person interactiv­e education, we’re going to lose a lot of students,” he said. “Students want real college. They don’t want college through a computer screen.”

But Meg Snead, Wolf ’s policy and planning secretary and board designee, cautioned that the administra­tion does not believe the legislatur­e has the power to remove the disaster declaratio­n.

“I’m sure this will be litigated,” she said.

Greenstein said chief to the colleges’ planning process is the knowledge that many students in the system would benefit from in-person instructio­n. During the spring, some students struggled with internet access in their local communitie­s.

“Many of the students that we engage don’t do desperatel­y well in remote learning.” he said. “They need the kind of engagement that our universiti­es provide.”

But Jamie Martin, president of the statewide faculty union and a professor at Indiana University of Pennsylvan­ia, cautioned system leaders to proceed carefully.

“We all want to be back in the classrooms interactin­g with our students, but we recognize that the fall 2020 semester is but one semester in many others that will follow,” she said.

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