Quinnipiac shuts down campus amid coronavirus fears


Photo by Wasim Ahmad

Photo by Wasim Ahmad

Following several universities and colleges across the nation, Quinnipiac University will not allow students to return to campus after spring break in an attempt to slow the spread of the coronavirus. The university canceled all classes for Monday, March 16 and Tuesday, March 17, and will move the rest of the semester’s classes online.

“The choices we are making place protecting the health of the entire Quinnipiac community, and supporting the continued academic work of our students, above all else,” Quinnipiac President Judy Olian wrote in an email to students sent Sunday evening. “The majority of faculty and staff will be working remotely and will continue to perform their job functions from home.”

The decision to move classes to an online format was made on March 10, with the university adding two extra days to spring break to ease the transition. Initially students were told they could return to campus housing on March 22. Officials reversed that decision Sunday, announcing that all university housing will close March 18, requiring all students to leave by then. This includes the York Hill campus, as well as all QU-owned houses.

“We will provide information at a later date on when and how student belongings can be retrieved,” Olian wrote.

Classes will be held online using the Zoom software. All events on campus are cancelled, including sporting events. The university promised some amount of refunds to students, but didn’t elaborate.

“We expect to be able to provide some level of refund for housing and meal plans for those graduating,” Olian wrote. “For students not yet graduating, the credit would be applied against next year’s costs.”

At least one student was distraught by the closure.

“I feel like I’m being robbed of the final defining moments of my college life,” Edward Maher, a senior at Quinnipiac, said. “Not by the school, but just by life. And frankly, I feel like that’s more upsetting”

Read the full message from Olian below, and for more information check out the university’s COVID-19 site:


Dear Quinnipiac Family,

We’re all living through an unprecedented time that continues to change on a daily – often hourly – basis. There’s no doubt that our lives have been upended for a while. That’s been very hard for many, including our students who come to Quinnipiac not just to learn, but to connect, compete, grow and lead. Through this time, the choices we are making place protecting the health of the entire Quinnipiac community, and supporting the continued academic work of our students, above all else.

That is why today we have come to this very difficult decision: Students will not return to campus after the extended spring break, and the remainder of the spring semester will be delivered online. University housing will be closed for the remainder of the spring semester with the exception of special cases that need accommodation. Taking this action now is – without a doubt – in the best interest of our students’ health, the health of our faculty and staff, and of our local communities. It is also consistent with the recommendations and urging of government officials all around us to safeguard communities and to try and slow the continued spread of this virus.
 
Here is some additional information on what this decision means for our university community:

  1. All university housing is closed.

    • Students are not permitted to return to any of the campuses at this time. We will provide information at a later date on when and how student belongings can be retrieved from the residence halls and other buildings.

    • Students currently living in university housing must leave by 9 p.m. on Wednesday, March 18.

    • Students with extraordinary circumstances who need access to, or to remain in, university housing must submit a special housing request for consideration. All requests must be submitted by noon on Monday, March 16, to conditionalrequests@qu.edu.

    • All university housing will remain locked to safeguard students’ belongings.

  2. We are transitioning to online delivery of all classes for the remainder of the semester.

    • Online classes begin Wednesday, March 18.

    • Faculty members responsible for each course are providing further details and instructions to students via Blackboard and university email.

    • The university’s libraries will be closed, but the libraries are accessible online for students’ remote use of their resources. Content can be accessed via MyQ at: go.qu.edu/libraryresources

    • Health Sciences and nursing students can continue with their clinicals and fieldwork as long as the clinical agencies/hospitals/sites will continue to support them. The university will evaluate this on a daily basis. In the event that students are not able to continue with clinical practical experiences, their program leaders will work with them to personalize a plan and to ensure that students’ clinical experiences meet requisite criteria.

  3. The university remains open; however, most services will be provided virtually as we ensure the continuity of academics and university operations.

    • The majority of faculty and staff will be working remotely and will continue to perform their job functions from home.

    • Some student employment, including work study and graduate assistantships, may continue if the job can be performed remotely. Students should contact their supervisors for more details. There may be additional student employment opportunities that can be completed remotely; contact nathan.petropoulos@qu.edu in Student Employment for details.

    • The university’s fitness centers are closed for the remainder of the semester.

  4. University Events

    • All university events, including admissions tours and info sessions, have been cancelled until further notice.

    • All spring collegiate and club athletic programs have been cancelled.

    • It is too early to make any decisions about our commencement ceremonies in May.

  5. Credits/Refunds

    • We expect to be able to provide some level of refund for housing and meal plans for those graduating; for students not yet graduating, the credit would be applied against next year’s costs.

    • We have been focused on the health and education of our students and have not yet resolved the financial impact of this crisis. We will provide further details in the coming weeks.

  6. Information and Resources

    • Website – regular updates are being posted online at www.qu.edu/COVID19

    • Frequently Asked Questions – we have addressed many common questions in an FAQ we have published online

    • Online Support Center – if you have any urgent questions remaining, please send an email to COVID19SupportCenter@qu.edu and a representative of our university will personally respond (please include a phone number in case we need to call you).

As our national leaders and health experts have all indicated, we need to ‘flatten the curve.’ While the virus cannot be stopped as of yet, we each can do our part to slow its spread so that our health care systems can catch up and cope with the scale of the outbreak. So for now, this is what we must do.

For all our current Bobcats, I share your sense of loss as we go through this experience – loss of time with friends, faculty and staff mentors, academic and athletic competitions, team activities, and social gatherings – that were abruptly taken from your lives. Your QU family will be examining whether, and how, we can offer any parts of those experiences later, even in the summer, especially for seniors. But right now, our focus is on everyone’s health.

Be well, take care of yourselves, and take care of each other.

Forced home: Observations from study abroad students coming back from Italy

Sydney Reynolds. Quinnipiac Junior, FCO → JFK (3/2/2020)


Sydney Reynolds Quinnipiac University, Junior

Sydney Reynolds Quinnipiac University, Junior

“I did not face any screenings or questions when I flew home, or when I landed. Neither airport had any type of temperature check and they didn’t ask what part of Italy I was in or what countries I’ve visited. It’s so weird because multiple Americans told me Trump and Pence were saying that there would be security at the borders. I didn’t face any. Pence then said it would be rolled out within 12 hours. So I texted my friends who flew home later than me… they faced nothing either. …right now, the promises given by our administration to contain the virus are empty.”

“My friend who flew home yesterday had health screening done only in the Roman airports. So there are still no changes, to my knowledge, to precautions in US airports”

Olivia Giusti, Junior at UMass Amherst, FCO → GVA → BOS (3/1/2020)


Olivia Giusti. UMass Amherst, Junior

Olivia Giusti. UMass Amherst, Junior

“I had to be checked for coronavirus before in and out of security in Italy. They check our temperature. This has happened to me every flight in and out of Italy I have taken since I started this experience. In Italy, since the very beginning, they checked my temperature every time I went in and out of the country. You walk up to a thing of a bunch of people sitting in a row, looking at you and you have to stop in front of them. They have a little screen and they look down at it and it has a camera and heat map for your face. So, they shine the camera at you and can tell if you have a temperature that way.

“ …When I got to Switzerland, they only asked me if I had been to China in the last 14 days. I obviously said no. When I landed in Boston though it was nothing. The woman in customs asked where I was coming from I said Rome, and she gave me back my passport and told me to have a nice day. She literally asked me nothing.”


Emma Dombrowski University of New Haven, Sophomore

Emma Dombrowski University of New Haven, Sophomore

Emma Dombrowski, University of New Haven, Sophomore, FLR→ JFK (3/3/2020)

“I flew home with some of the other students and nothing was done as far as seeing if we were sick when we landed.”

“There’s less of a focus on people who aren’t coming from China.”

“My temperature was taken at the airport before getting on the plane but nothing was done after that. We were just free to go basically.”

“There weren’t any changes that I saw within the airport…you couldn’t tell that there was a virus spreading or anything…it was very odd to me.”

Key of Airport Codes

BOS = Boston, Massachusetts

FCO = Rome, Italy

FLR = Florence, Italy

GVA = Geneva, Switzerland

JFK = New York City

Coronavirus outbreak has QU ‘strongly urging’ students studying in Italy to return home


Fear of the Coronavirus rises following outbreak in Northern Italy

Fear of the Coronavirus rises following outbreak in Northern Italy

By Garrett Amill with additional reporting by Peter O’Neill

Following the outbreak of the coronavirus in Northern Italy, Quinnipiac University officials have strongly urged students studying abroad there to return home.

In a letter sent by Jennifer Brown, interim provost and executive vice president, and Mark Tortora, associate director of education abroad programs, to QU students studying in Italy sent Wednesday, Feb. 26, 3:33 p.m., QU urged students to return and complete the semester at home through online courses.

The letter also said that students who returned would be required to stay off of campus for two weeks.

Several other universities are pulling their students out of study abroad programs, including Connecticut’s Fairfield University, Sacred Heart University and the University of New Haven.

Tortora worked through Tuesday night researching and discussing options, as well as talking with parents, according to Quinnipiac’s Department of Cultural and Global Engagement.

Sydney Reynolds is a Quinnipiac sophomore Media Studies major studying in Rome this semester through API, a partner program.

“(Infections aren’t) in Rome, but someone said, ‘It’s best to be aware, not anxious,’” she said via Zoom Wednesday morning.

“I’m trying to not to freak myself out,” she said, adding that a trip to Tuscany for the weekend of Feb. 29 has been canceled. “All the study abroad students are so on edge. It’s the only thing we talk about.”

Reynolds, 19, said she takes a tram to campus each day and “lots of people” are wearing masks in an effort to avoid contracting the virus, however, she does not want to return home.

“I’ve invested a lot of money studying abroad — not just tuition… but I’ve also spent a lot of money on plane tickets, hotels, buses. I’d lose so much money if I got sent home,” Reynolds said.

She said her parents plan to join her in Europe in two weeks for spring break, but those plans are in question as they were to travel to Venice, which is locked down to prevent the spread of the virus.

“I have no idea if we can do that, now,” Reynolds said.

Reynolds said she plans to stay in Italy after hearing QU’s warning. “I discussed it with my parents,” she said via email after receiving Quinnipiac’s letter. “If it comes to Rome and starts getting bigger, I will probably leave. Would rather be home than be quarantined.”

The Centers for Disease Control issued a “Level 2” advisory to “exercise increased caution,” it Italy, as it had been prior to the cluster of coronavirus cases in Northern Italy.  The CDC does not recommend canceling or postponing travel to Italy, the advisory said. 

A representative of Quinnipiac’s Department of Cultural and Global Engagement is unsure at this time how many Quinnipiac students are based in Italy, but Tortola, who was unavailable, knows.

Tortora sent an email on Feb. 23 advising students in Italy to be vigilant and review CDC updates before traveling anywhere.

As of Feb. 26, the World Health Organization reports 322 cases of coronavirus in Italy. 11 people have died. These numbers are rising.