| LIFE CV-19: Effects on life, work, and sports

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Semester Completion Plan Announced.


Semester Completion Plan

March 18, 2020

Dear UA students, faculty and staff,

As the COVID-19 pandemic affects our community and the world, our UA administration has been tirelessly consulting available resources and experts to make decisions that are in the best interests of the health and safety of our campus community.

Given the latest directives from federal and state officials, I have signed an Emergency Declaration for The University of Alabama, allowing our officials to take further actions to protect the campus community and limit access to campus premises during this public health crisis. This is consistent with the Governor’s announcement of updated precautionary public health guidelines, including prohibiting on-premises service at restaurants in town.

Our semester will be completed under the plan below, posted on our website at healthinfo.ua.edu and updated as additional details become available. Please understand the thoughtfulness with which this plan was developed and is now conveyed. I personally believe there is no higher calling than to be an educator, and it is a great joy of my life and of the lives of our many faculty and staff to interact with a rich and active campus life. This year, more than others, we look forward to the later return of students, faculty, staff, alumni, parents and supporters who make our campus community so special.

  1. Spring 2020 Classes. All remaining classes this semester will be taught remotely. There will be no further person-to-person or on-site instruction. Exceptions will only be made as accreditors or licensors require, and as specifically approved by the Provost. Our faculty are working hard to offer the best alternatives to our students, using the most effective tools available. Faculty, know that the administration supports you in these efforts, and assistance is provided via the Center for Instructional Technology, the Office of Information Technology and the Provost – linked at healthinfo.ua.edu. Students, know that your professors will support you through this transition.
  2. Students Must NOT Return to Campus from Spring Break. Residence halls and Greek residential houses are closed. Recreation facilities are also closed. Dining halls, food courts, libraries and other services will not be readily available. The availability of such services in the community is also greatly limited. Now that on-campus classes will not resume this semester, a plan will be communicated in the near future regarding residential student housing fees and meal plans.
  3. Short-Term Hardships Must Be Compelling and Specifically Approved in Order to Remain in Campus Housing. Students with hardships, such as homeless students or those without the ability to complete classes online from home, must apply for an exception with supporting documentation to Student Life. Short-term and limited arrangements will only be approved, under extenuating and rare circumstances, by an administrative team appointed by the Vice President for Student Life.
  4. Move Out Plan for On-Campus Housing. In order to provide for further social distancing, a staggered plan to retrieve your belongings from the residence halls and Greek houses is being developed and will be communicated at a later date. Students are not authorized to return to campus outside of this plan and any who show up without authorization will not be accommodated. Students needing immediate access to medicines or other critical necessities should call:
Residence halls: 205-348-6676

Greek houses: 205-348-2693

  1. Cancellation of Spring Commencement and other Events. Honors week, athletic activities and other events are canceled for the remainder of the semester. On-campus Spring Commencement will not be held as scheduled, and families should not plan on traveling to campus for that event. We are actively exploring and hope to provide alternative means of recognizing the significant achievements of graduates and students earning honors, but it is too early to make those plans firm.
  2. Interim/Summer Education Abroad. Interim and summer education abroad classes are canceled. Further communications to affected faculty, staff, and students will be forthcoming.
  3. Interim/Summer Classes. Given the current guidance, it is possible that online models of instruction will continue for all students through interim and regular summer terms. Registration for those terms may be extended.
  4. Further Information from ADPH. We are working closely with the UA System COVID-19 Task Force, the infectious disease specialists on our sister campuses and the Alabama Department of Public Health on all aspects of virus prevention, testing, notification and treatment. Once the health department receives notification of a positive result, the health department — or an official designee — will contact the person who tested positive and begin determining who around the person might have been exposed. ADPH gathers and provides verified tests, contacts the case, determines the contacts at risk, and notifies individuals of what to do. If an individual is determined to have been in close contact with someone who has been diagnosed, ADPH will contact that individual directly to discuss next steps.
Thank you for your understanding and your strict compliance with this plan. It is necessary for the health and well-being of our academic community. My best wishes are with each of you, and I know we will face this unprecedented emergency together with our ever-present resilience and uncompromising spirit as we continue our service in the highest manner.

Sincerely,

Stuart R. Bell
President
 
I’m in a group outside of work that just cancelled our annual conference that had 10-12 thousand people at the Gaylord in Nashville. And we’re not the only group cancelling on them right now. Imagine how hard that hits a company. $170 a night for 3 nights for 2,900 rooms. $1.5MM for just half a week.
 
Daily News reporting ...

The economic cost of the coronavirus may push Major League Baseball’s to canceling the 2020 Draft and cut the international free agent signing period to recoup money lost during the coronavirus shutdown, according to an AP report.​
The money potentially saved by pushing the yearly infusion of prospect talent into 2021 is not negligible: Signing bonuses for amateur players total roughly $400 million.​
Opening day has already been pushed back until at least mid-May as the Centers for Disease Control urges social distancing — a practice incompatible with stadium-size crowds. The indefinite postponement of the season will likely leave the league with significant financial losses in expected ticket sales and broadcast revenue.​
 
I’m in a group outside of work that just cancelled our annual conference that had 10-12 thousand people at the Gaylord in Nashville. And we’re not the only group cancelling on them right now. Imagine how hard that hits a company. $170 a night for 3 nights for 2,900 rooms. $1.5MM for just half a week.

Everyone is cancelling, everywhere. I posted something on hotel occupancy rates a few days ago. Atlanta's worst during the great recession was 50 percent, hearing it's currently at twenty percent. It started about two weeks ago with a few scattered things, then SXSW cancelled in Austin, a 20M plus gathering in Atlanta, and now it's universal. All entertainment venues are closed with very few exceptions. Vegas is shut down, casinos and hotels. I saw an estimate that a two month hiatus due to the breakout could push national unemployment to twenty percent. I'm not sure they're factoring in the collapse in oil prices into that estimate or not. For context, the national unemployment rate hasn't been above ten percent since it was 10.2 percent in 1982 (it was 9.9 percent in 2009). Before 1982, it was 1940 at 14.6%. The only years it's been over twenty percent was 1932-35. It almost hit twenty percent again in 1938 when they first instituted the minimum wage, but that's it.

Hunker down, take care of those close to you, help those you can. Pray for all.

RTR,

Tim
 
Amazing how quick this spiralled.

It is spiraling.....almost a death spiral
And all measures are to get it...the curve...to just flatten out....
Its not going to get back...til...their is a vaccine....
Til people can getback together....til businesses can reopen....
Then...the economy will explode ..... will look like after ww2
But when will this happen? That the big question
 
Honestly, my biggest fear right now is that this crisis is going to push long-term changes that are going to be more destructive than the virus itself. Things done in a crisis have a tendency to stick around, especially if politicians realize they can use them to buy votes. That may hamper any recovery we may see. I would hope that those who love open borders and the world-wide economy would see that this is precisely why we have to control borders and why we have to expect countries like China to have the same protection laws that the first world has, but I expect not.
 
We have tickets to a concert and hotels for April 18 and they won't refund us until the city has shut it down. Granted partially on me for stupidly not getting insurance and it's a very small thing in comparison to what's going on around us but it's frustrating nonetheless.
 
Honestly, my biggest fear right now is that this crisis is going to push long-term changes that are going to be more destructive than the virus itself. Things done in a crisis have a tendency to stick around, especially if politicians realize they can use them to buy votes. That may hamper any recovery we may see. I would hope that those who love open borders and the world-wide economy would see that this is precisely why we have to control borders and why we have to expect countries like China to have the same protection laws that the first world has, but I expect not.

Agreed, you get the pendulum moving in one direction, it's hard to stop. I do hope that the democracies of the world finally wake up to the threat and enemy that is a self-interested, communist China. Because they are the first nation recovering from the pandemic, they are taking steps - both legal and illegal - right now to gain an advantage over the U.S. and the world. They've announced their intent to ban U.S. reporters from their country, increasing their grip on their people and the way they falsely present themselves to the world.

Until recently, I've been lazy and cheap in buying Chinese goods. The shift with Amazon over the past 18 months prompted me to cancel Prime about a year ago. I actively search for other outlets to buy from companies other than Amazon, and I've started deliberately buying U.S. first, other nations second, and China as a last resort. We need a national effort to return medicine and other basic necessities to U.S. and democratic sourcing. I'm willing to pay more to do that.

RTR,

Tim
 
We have tickets to a concert and hotels for April 18 and they won't refund us until the city has shut it down. Granted partially on me for stupidly not getting insurance and it's a very small thing in comparison to what's going on around us but it's frustrating nonetheless.

What hotel? Is it part of a chain? Almost everyone has changed their policies, and I know Marriott has greatly relaxed their cancellation policy. As it draws closer, you'll probably have an opportunity.
 
What hotel? Is it part of a chain? Almost everyone has changed their policies, and I know Marriott has greatly relaxed their cancellation policy. As it draws closer, you'll probably have an opportunity.

It's an Econo Lodge, I spoke to someone today that told me to e-mail corporate pretty much, so hopefully that will be taken care of. I know Marriott got DRAGGED for some of the things they were doing with refusing cancellations and have been making the appropriate changes.
 
I just saw an article that says chloroquine (a medicine used to treat malaria) has shown some promise in treating coronavirus. Hopefully, this might be a solution or at least a means to manage it. It's too soon to jump up and down, but I'll grab onto any optimism, no matter how tiny it may be.
 
I just saw an article that says chloroquine (a medicine used to treat malaria) has shown some promise in treating coronavirus. Hopefully, this might be a solution or at least a means to manage it. It's too soon to jump up and down, but I'll grab onto any optimism, no matter how tiny it may be.

If you've had retina issues, take a chance on corona.
 
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