The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Mask rules fall by wayside at colleges

While some students comply, social media shows others ignore guidelines at parties, on campuses.

- By Eric Stirgus eric.stirgus@ajc.com and Kristal Dixon kristal.dixon@ajc.com

Several Georgia universiti­es reopened Monday for the fall semester amid renewed calls for schools to conduct all classes online, as videos showing large groups of mostly maskless students partying in close spaces surfaced on social media.

The University of North Georgia said in a statement Monday it was disappoint­ed after a video showed what appeared to be several hundred students partying Saturday night in an off-campus apartment complex near its Dahlonega campus. No one in the video appeared to wear a face mask.

The university has reported 19 students who have been diagnosed with COVID-19 since Aug. 1, as some students returned to their dorms in preparatio­n for the semester, which began Monday.

“The University of North Georgia continues to emphasize to our students and university community that everyone has an individual responsibi­lity both on and off campus to follow guidance from the Georgia Department of Public Health and the CDC to prevent the spread of the virus,” the statement said.

In mid-July the University System of Georgia, which includes North Georgia, required students, employees and visitors at its 26 institutio­ns to wear face coverings in classrooms and other spaces on its campuses to reduce potential exposure to COVID-19. The rules do not extend to off-campus spaces.

Still, public health officials and Gov. Brian Kemp have encouraged Georgians to wear face coverings when they can’t socially distance themselves from others.

Georgia College President Steve Dorman emailed students Sunday urging them “to take personal responsibi­lity and do your part to keep yourself and others safe” after several complaints of students partying off campus without masks. Caron Pennington, who lives across the street from the Milledgevi­lle campus, said she saw several young students drunkenly walking outside a house near her home Thursday. No one was wearing a face covering, she said.

“Everything they’re doing on campus is simply negated because they take their masks off as soon as they leave the campus,” said Pennington, who added city police have been slow to respond to resident complaints.

The city’s police chief referred questions for comment to an employee who was not working Monday.

Georgia College has reported 23 confirmed cases of students with COVID-19 in the last seven days, according to its website.

Photos of large groups identified as maskless University of Georgia students have surfaced online as well. UGA begins classes Thursday.

Most of the Atlanta region’s largest private colleges and universiti­es are conducting classes online this semester. On Monday, one of the South’s largest public universiti­es, the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, announced it is shifting to online courses for undergradu­ate students after reporting about 130 student infections during the first week of classes. More than 500 students are in isolation or quarantine.

The United Campus Workers of Georgia started a petition Monday demanding more online courses at North Georgia, enhanced testing measures and for faculty to work remotely if they prefer to do so.

Many University System schools are offering a mix of in-person and online courses. The system office does not monitor how individual faculty conduct classes, a spokesman said Monday, but some faculty claim officials are forcing them to keep their classes in person if they are designated as such.

At Georgia Tech, where classes began Monday, about three dozen students held an hourlong demonstrat­ion against the in-person return plans. They demanded more personal protective equipment for campus workers and that all classes be held online.

“This is a death march for nothing,” said Margot Paez, a fifthyear doctoral student.

In another part of the Georgia Tech campus, underneath Bobby Dodd Stadium, employees conducted voluntary COVID19 saliva tests for students and workers. Georgia Tech President Ángel Cabrera said the goal is to identify asymptomat­ic carriers. The school hopes to conduct about 1,500 tests a day, he said.

“It gives you peace of mind and it gives us data for our preparatio­ns,” said Cabrera, who thanked people as they waited in line for testing.

Georgia Tech and Kennesaw State, which also reopened Monday, have had 186 and 45 confirmed COVID-19 cases, respective­ly, since early March. In many instances, the infected person was off campus when diagnosed, officials said.

The pandemic forced Kennesaw State to make some changes, particular­ly its tradition of offering slices of the First Day of School cake. This year, they handed out individual­ly wrapped cookies.

KSU spokeswoma­n Tammy DeMel said the school is expecting a fall enrollment of about 40,000, which is up from about 38,000 in fall 2019. More than a quarter of classes are completely online, she said.

KSU’s Student Government Associatio­n posted an infographi­c on social media explaining the proper way to wear masks. Students appeared to be following the guidelines Monday.

Anngie Villegas and Henna Ganesh, both first-year students who graduated from River Ridge High School in Woodstock, said they are glad to be on campus. They wore masks while lounging on swings on the Campus Green and said they feel more protected with additional precaution­s in place.

Abby Hayman of Canton, a junior, said she wears a mask when she’s indoors and unable to socially distance herself from large crowds.

“We’re just trying to make the most of it,” she said.

 ??  ?? nnesaw State University freshman Kyle Johnson wears a mask while working on his computer during the first day of classes Monday on the main campus in Kennesaw.
nnesaw State University freshman Kyle Johnson wears a mask while working on his computer during the first day of classes Monday on the main campus in Kennesaw.
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER PHOTOS / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Scrappy the Owl, Kennesaw State’s mascot, covers his beak with a face mask Monday as he greets students and faculty on the first day of classes. KSU spokeswoma­n Tammy DeMel said the school is expecting a fall enrollment of about 40,000, which is up from about 38,000 in fall 2019. More than a quarter of classes are completely online, she said.
ALYSSA POINTER PHOTOS / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Scrappy the Owl, Kennesaw State’s mascot, covers his beak with a face mask Monday as he greets students and faculty on the first day of classes. KSU spokeswoma­n Tammy DeMel said the school is expecting a fall enrollment of about 40,000, which is up from about 38,000 in fall 2019. More than a quarter of classes are completely online, she said.
 ?? ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM ?? Kennesaw State University president Pamela S. Whitten participat­es in the annual First Day of School cake cutting celebratio­n Monday in Kennesaw, though instead of the tradition of sharing slices with students, the university handed out individual­ly wrapped cookies.
ALYSSA POINTER / ALYSSA.POINTER@AJC.COM Kennesaw State University president Pamela S. Whitten participat­es in the annual First Day of School cake cutting celebratio­n Monday in Kennesaw, though instead of the tradition of sharing slices with students, the university handed out individual­ly wrapped cookies.
 ?? JOSHUA L. JONES / ATHENS BANNER-HERALD VIA AP ?? University of Georgia undergradu­ate students have been moving into Brumby Hall as UGA is set to reopen, with classes starting Thursday.
JOSHUA L. JONES / ATHENS BANNER-HERALD VIA AP University of Georgia undergradu­ate students have been moving into Brumby Hall as UGA is set to reopen, with classes starting Thursday.

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