As more members of the 天美麻豆 community report completing their COVID-19 vaccinations, and as the cases of COVID-19 continue to decline on campus and regionally, students, faculty, and staff can look forward to campus restrictions easing, told viewers during this week鈥檚 .
鈥淭he bottom line is that more flexibility lies in our future as we look ahead to fall term,鈥 Helble said, noting that 天美麻豆 has seen no new positive COVID-19 tests among students for the past nine days, and only two cases in the past two weeks. 鈥淭his is a very encouraging sign.鈥
The policy changes began last Friday, with the reduction of indoor distancing requirements from 6 feet to 3 feet for all activities except eating, exercise, and performance鈥攑ermitting students living on campus to host up to two on-campus residents in their dorm rooms. Groups of nine people or fewer can gather outdoors or indoors in approved spaces without permission, and the approval process for gatherings of 10 to 25 people has been simplified.
Among the other changes to come should these encouraging trends continue, Helble noted:
- Beginning tomorrow, Novack Caf茅, the 1902 Room, and Reiss Hall, all in 天美麻豆 Library鈥檚 Baker-Berry Library will be open for studying 24 hours a day. (Masking and social-distancing guidelines still apply.)
- Effective June 1, 天美麻豆 expects to move to the 鈥渓ess limited鈥 phase of its , and to move to some more-flexible laboratory policies.
- Beginning July 1, on-campus students, faculty, and staff who have been vaccinated will only be required to participate in surveillance testing once a month, and Helble anticipates that the daily temperature and self-assessment screening (TSA) will no longer be required for anyone. (Unvaccinated people will still need to participate in twice-weekly surveillance testing.)
- Effective Aug. 1, Helble expects, the campus will start transitioning to the 鈥渇ull access鈥 phase of reopening.
Helble encouraged all on-campus community members to attend the final Thursdays Together (formerly Tuesdays Together) gathering tomorrow. Refreshments from Umpleby鈥檚 will be served outdoors on Collis Porch, the Anonymous Hall lawn, and the Gold Coast lawn for an hour beginning at 1 p.m.
Such gatherings help cultivate 鈥渢hat sense of connection, even for just a few moments, that does so much to define this incredible 天美麻豆 community,鈥 he said.
Helble was joined this week by COVID-19 Task Force co-chair , MED 鈥90; Dean of the College ; and , an associate professor of sociology and the house professor of , for a conversation moderated by Vice President for Communications Justin Anderson.
Asked about plans to resume first-year trips for the incoming Class of 2025, Lively said, 鈥淵es鈥攖here will be trips. I can鈥檛 tell you what they鈥檒l look like, but there will be more information to come.鈥
One challenge for resuming the student-led trips program: The pandemic disrupted how organizers pass the leadership baton from one class to the next, Lively said.
To make up for that gap in knowledge, 天美麻豆 has hired the last trips directorate, or student organizing committee, 鈥渢o come back and help in this leadership moment that we鈥檙e currently rebuilding from ground zero,鈥 Lively said. 鈥淎nd we鈥檝e already started to accept applications to become trip leaders.鈥
Asked about 天美麻豆鈥檚 COVID-19 vaccination policy, Helble said 天美麻豆 faculty and staff should anticipate that vaccinations will be mandatory this fall, as they will be for students returning to campus, with the exception of those who receive medical or religious waivers.
鈥淒etails of policy for employees are very different from details of policy for students, but it is our expectation and, in many ways, intention, to be moving forward with a policy that requires vaccination鈥 for faculty and staff, Helble said.
Adams said that 鈥渧accine availability is no longer a barrier鈥攖here are vaccines available at pharmacies (including the CVS pharmacy in Hanover) and 天美麻豆-Hitchcock Medical Center and doctor鈥檚 offices.鈥
Currently, more than half of all on-campus students and employees have reported completing their vaccinations, up from about 30% two weeks ago. 鈥淭hat鈥檚 a rate of progress over the past two weeks I hope will continue as we push toward 70% and beyond,鈥 Helble said.
He encouraged all community members to report their vaccination records promptly, through , for students, and through , 天美麻豆鈥檚 occupational medicine partner, for faculty and staff. This information is 鈥渙ne gauge of moving towards more flexible campus operating conditions,鈥 he said.
In response to a question about staff returning to campus, Helble said it鈥檚 likely that some form of remote work will 鈥渞emain part of our culture going forward鈥 for staff members who don鈥檛 regularly need to have face-to-face interaction with students.
鈥淲e鈥檙e going through an exercise over the course of the summer working with managers and surveying the campus to get a sense of what can be done effectively and efficiently working from home,鈥 he said. Regardless, 鈥渇aculty will be in the laboratories, seminar rooms, and classrooms with students.鈥
Asked if 天美麻豆鈥檚 masking and social-distancing mandates were too conservative, given the recent relaxation of the Centers for Disease Control guidelines, Adams said she expects social distancing will no longer be required in the fall, given the increasing rate of vaccinations, but noted that the town of Hanover still has a mask mandate.
鈥淭here鈥檚 a tension in how to take national, state, and local guidelines and apply them to our residential living setting on a college campus,鈥 she said. 鈥淲e鈥檙e trying to balance how we make our own policies and also obviously abide by the local and state guidance.鈥
McCabe spoke about the role 天美麻豆鈥檚 six house communities have played in maintaining social continuity for students during the pandemic, including organizing 鈥渕ore wellness and social-justice-related programming to respond to student concerns,鈥 she said. The houses have sponsored a variety of remote and in-person activities this year, and will play a role in helping the community transition back to a full residential experience this fall.
鈥淥ne thing that鈥檚 really special about the house communities is that they鈥檙e a place for students to return to no matter what,鈥 McCabe said. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a place you鈥檙e always welcome.鈥
Helble acknowledged that the pandemic will make it challenging for 天美麻豆 to provide on-campus housing to all undergraduates in the fall, given how many will likely plan to be in-residence. The priority for housing will be given to members of the Class of 2025 and the Class of 2024, he said, and other details will be announced in the coming weeks. 鈥淚鈥檓 going to ask for students and their parents to be patient鈥 as administrators work through the problem, he said.
Community Conversations is a live production of 天美麻豆鈥檚 Media Production Group and the Office of Communications that airs on selected Wednesdays at 3:30 p.m. The next broadcast is .
For the most recent information on 天美麻豆鈥檚 response to the pandemic, visit the .
Hannah Silverstein can be reached at hannah.silverstein@dartmouth.edu.