Dayton Daily News

UD REPORTS 89 NEW VIRUS CASES; TOTAL RISES TO 240

Number has increased several days, forcing shift to online classes.

- ByJen Balduf

TheUnivers­ity of Dayton DAYTON— reported 89 new COVID19 cases Wednesday, bringing the institutio­n’s total number of active cases to 240.

Since Saturday, the university has reported a combined 213 new cases, with the numbers increasing each day. The jump in cases forced officials to shift all classes to online learning for the first week. Officials have not said if they will continue with online learning the second week of the semester.

The institutio­n has beenworkin­g since the spring to put safety measures in place to prepare the campus for fall classes. They’ve also put in additional measures since classes startedMon­day, and have been enforcing mask-wearing and disciplini­ng students who violate the safety protocols.

“In recent days, we are pleased with the positive signs of more student compliance with COVID19 safety measures,” UD said in a statement released Wednesday. “We are evaluating the situation every day, and will inform our campus community of any changes.”

On Tuesday, the school launched its COVID-19 surveillan­ce testing program, which

calls for testing up to 1,000 students per week. It’s designed to identify individual­s who may be carrying the virus but show no symptoms. The testing program is also aimed at assessing the spread of the virus within the campus community. It includes testing targeted at potential hot spots as well as random testing, the university said, noting that students will be notified directly if they are selected for testing.

Students who opted for face-to-face learning are disappoint­ed that the university was forced to shift to remote learning, senior Bree Murray said. However, they realize themove is for everyone’s safety, saidMurray, a Pittsburgh native. Given the rise in cases each of the past few days, Murray fears the university will be forced to transition to remote learning the remainder of the semester.

“People are really upset (about not having in-person classes), I know that,” she said. “It’s good that (the university is) enforcing masks, they’re really getting on people because they’re trying to slow the spread. But everybody’s pretty upset, everybody I’ve talked to. It’s weird, very different vibe than usual here.”

In its reopening plan released in June, the university planned to have a combinatio­n of in-person and virtual classes this fall. However, according to the plan, instructor­s were to prepare lesson plans that would allow them to transition to online instructio­ns if there’s an outbreak.

In preparatio­n for students and staff returning to campus, the university planned to spend an estimated $15 million on personal protective equipment, technology, facilities, signage, testing and contact tracing, the university said in July. In addition, they received $5.2 million through the federal CARES Act to offset some pandemic expenses, and officials planned to direct those funds to emergency grants to students and to prepare the campus for full operations.

“We’re committed to doing it, it’s the right thing to do, but it does create some unplanned expenses that, luckily as a relatively wealthy institutio­n, we’ll be able to weather through some of those things,” AndyHorner, executive vice president of business and administra­tive services, told the Dayton Daily News in July. “But like everybody else, we can’t predict the future. And so a lot of what we’re doing is pretty conservati­ve to ensure that we’re able to preserve our assets asmuch as possible.”

 ?? JIMNOELKER /
STAFF ?? Students at University of Dayton on-campus housing display a banner on their front porch related to the COVID-19 outbreak.
JIMNOELKER / STAFF Students at University of Dayton on-campus housing display a banner on their front porch related to the COVID-19 outbreak.

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