The Morning Call

Penn State faculty push for vaccinatio­n mandate

Request comes days after a second student dies of COVID-19

- By Susan Snyder

As coronaviru­s cases again rise, faculty at Penn State are calling on the administra­tion to require all students and staff to be vaccinated before they return for the fall semester.

“More than 600 universiti­es and colleges in the U.S. have implemente­d a COVID-19 vaccinatio­n requiremen­t,” the Coalition for a Just University, a faculty group long critical of the university’s handling of the coronaviru­s, said Tuesday in a statement. “But Penn State is not among them. Instead, the

Penn State administra­tion has merely encouraged students to get vaccinated and offered incentives for vaccinatio­n.”

The group’s urging comes as the delta variant has fueled a surge in cases and follows the death last weekend of a second Penn State student from coronaviru­s-related complicati­ons. Neil Patel, 20, a finance major from Upper Merion Township and a member of Penn State’s Schreyer Honors College, died after a monthslong hospital stay and battle against the virus, according to a post his father wrote on a GoFundMe page for his son Sunday.

At a town hall meeting Tuesday, Penn State leaders affirmed their decision not to mandate vaccinatio­n but said they would require unvaccinat­ed students and staff members to be regularly tested for the virus or face penalties. Unvaccinat­ed students will be tested before they move into the residence halls this month and every week after that, said Damon Sims, vice president for student affairs.

University officials also said unvaccinat­ed people would be required to wear masks indoors and vaccinated people would be strongly encouraged to do the same. In areas with high transmissi­on of the virus, everyone will be required to wear masks indoors, they said.

While not requiring vaccinatio­n, school President Eric Barron asserted that the university wants everyone to be vaccinated and said the success of the

fall semester depends on it.

“Let me be clear,” he said. “Penn State is not impartial when it comes to getting vaccinated . ... Getting vaccinated is the single best way to protect yourself and our community from serious illness.”

Shortly after the town hall, the faculty coalition said the university’s plan failed to address many of their requests, including providing remote learning options for those concerned about the virus and requiring everyone to wear masks, even those who are vaccinated.

“This is not enough,” said Valerie Braman, a faculty member and spokespers­on for the group.

The university intends to go forward with plans to bring tens of thousands of students back to campus in a few weeks and hold most of its classes in person — 95% at its University Park classes in person and 88% at its other campuses around the commonweal­th.

At a board of trustees meeting this summer, Barron said the university would keep in place many of its COVID-19 mitigation efforts from last year. That includes a public dashboard — where case numbers are recorded — as well as quarantine space and the testing of wastewater for the virus.

The University Park campus, with more than 40,000 students, saw thousands of coronaviru­s cases last year but did not shut down. The university’s dorms were about three-quarters filled and the school held a mix of in-person and remote classes.

Vaccinatio­n policies at area campuses vary. Some — including the University of Pennsylvan­ia, Drexel, Villanova, Widener, Cabrini, Neumann, the College of New Jersey and Princeton — are requiring both students and employees to be vaccinated. Others have issued the mandate just for students. In the Lehigh Valley, students are required to get shots at Lehigh University and Muhlenberg College.

Temple, Penn State, and the 14 schools in the Pennsylvan­ia State System of Higher Education aren’t requiring vaccines, just strongly encouragin­g them. The state system has said there is no legislatio­n that specifical­ly enables it to require the vaccine. But state universiti­es in other states, including Rutgers in New Jersey, have done so. Indiana University also issued a requiremen­t that withstood a court challenge.

A Penn State spokespers­on said in June: “We think an incentives-based approach offers the best, most pragmatic way to encourage high rates of vaccinatio­n.” The university has offered drawings with cash prizes, gift cards and footballs autographe­d by coach James Franklin to students and employees who upload their vaccinatio­n cards.

During the town hall, university officials said 56% of employees responded to a survey on their vaccinatio­n status. Of those, 92% said they were vaccinated. Of students, 42% of the more than 87,000 surveyed responded, with more than three-quarters saying they were vaccinated.

Both the undergradu­ate student government and the university faculty senate at Penn State have urged the university to require vaccines. The graduate and profession­al student associatio­n also called for vaccines to be mandated. The coalition added its voice this week in a letter signed by more than 660 faculty from multiple Penn State campuses.

The group said in addition to requiring vaccines, Penn State should continue to require social distancing, conduct random surveillan­ce testing, improve ventilatio­n standards, and offer more flexible teaching and learning guidelines.

“As the parent of a child too young to be vaccinated, I am extremely nervous about a return to campus in the fall,” Tracy Rutler, assistant professor of French and Francophon­e studies and women’s, gender, and sexuality studies, said in the group’s statement.

She noted that Patel, the student who died, was one of her students.

“I do not want this for myself, my family, my colleagues, or my students,” she said. “We must require vaccines and rethink our approach to the fall semester.”

Chet Patel wrote that his son, a drummer, guitarist, and baseball player, had been studying remotely during the last academic year. He tried to get the vaccine but had been rejected at the Convention Center in Philadelph­ia. He finally was able to schedule a vaccine, but it was too late. He had contracted the coronaviru­s while working a service job to help pay for a planned summer educationa­l trip to France.

Patel was hospitaliz­ed in April, placed on a ventilator, underwent surgery, and lost an arm to amputation during his lengthy battle, his father wrote.

The Upper Merion Area School Board noted his death at its meeting Monday night and Penn State expressed its condolence­s in a statement. (Another Penn State student, Juan Garcia of Allentown, died of coronaviru­s-related complicati­ons last year.)

The GoFundMe page that was started in April has raised nearly $88,000. “Our son and my dear boy has moved on to his next journey,” Patel wrote Sunday. “Neil fought his illness like a brave knight ... just as I had raised him to be.”

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