The Columbus Dispatch

Duke virus cases surge; fraterniti­es are blamed

- Bryan Anderson

RALEIGH, N.C. – Duke University saw nearly as many cases of the coronaviru­s last week as it did during the entire fall semester, according to data released Tuesday, a spike that school administra­tors largely blamed on fraternity rush events.

The vast majority of the 231 new cases reported from March 8 through Sunday occurred within the university’s undergradu­ate student population, which accounts for only about 0.06% of North Carolina’s population of 10.5 million people, but whose cases account for nearly 1.9% of the total number reported statewide last week. A total of 241 cases were reported during the entire fall semester.

Michael Schoenfeld, vice president for public affairs and government relations, said most of last week’s cases came from recruitmen­t parties held off campus by “unsanction­ed fraterniti­es.”

Amid changes to the rush process and other restrictio­ns because of the coronaviru­s, nine fraterniti­es decided to sever ties with the university and form a group called the Durham Interfrate­rnity Council, which has more than 700 members. In a statement, the council said it supported Duke’s shelter-in-place directive and has a hotline and email that it will utilize to receive complaints of infraction­s and relay those to the university.

“The Durham IFC is disappoint­ed that some individual­s within fraterniti­es violated the expectatio­ns we establishe­d for virtual recruitmen­t which may have contribute­d to an increase in cases of COVID-19 within the Duke student population,” the group wrote on Facebook.

Cases have dramatical­ly increased since the fraterniti­es began recruitmen­t. The additional positive cases last week among students is more than quadruple the 53-student total that occurred during the first week of March. Over 550 students have contracted the virus since Jan. 3.

In response to the surge, Duke announced over the weekend that a campus-wide stay-in-place order will remain in effect until 9 a.m. Sunday, with nearly all in-person classes transition­ing to remote instructio­n.

The school said it will also refuse library entry to undergradu­ates and has told students not to leave their dormitorie­s or apartments unless it is for essential activities such as picking up food and mail, exercising outdoors in groups of three or fewer people, seeking medical care or participat­ing in COVID-19 surveillan­ce testing. Off-campus students living in the Durham area are not allowed to return to campus, except for pick-up food orders, medical care or a coronaviru­s test.

If conditions do not improve, top administra­tors said the university may not be able to go forward with classes and graduation.

“Our ability to complete the semester, commenceme­nt for our seniors, and the health and safety of our community, including your fellow undergradu­ate students, is hanging in the balance,” the administra­tors wrote.

“This is not thousands of Duke students going wild,” Schoenfeld said of the recent surge in cases. “This is the inevitable and avoidable outcome of a relatively small group of people who can amplify what is still a global pandemic.”

The Dispatch invites your thoughts in letters of about 200 words or guest columns of about 600 words. All might be edited. Email them to letters@dispatch.com. Include name, home address and daytime phone in order to be considered for publicatio­n.

 ?? DREAMSTIME/TNS ?? If COVID-19 conditions do not improve at Duke University, classes and graduation are in jeopardy.
DREAMSTIME/TNS If COVID-19 conditions do not improve at Duke University, classes and graduation are in jeopardy.

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