Weekly Update from Chancellor Jones (8/31 – 9/4)

We are increasing enforcement of COVID-19 safety guidelines.

For the next two weeks, the university expects all undergraduate students to significantly restrict in-person activities.

We are providing more detailed information about the university’s on-campus testing program, including Labor Day hours.

On-campus testing is required for all students, faculty and staff participating in on-campus activities during the Fall 2020 semester.

View the testing locations and hours. Please note that the following testing sites will be open from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Labor Day:

  • State Farm Center (indoor)
  • NCSA (outdoor)
  • Illini Union (indoor)
  • Washington Park (outdoor)
  • Vet Med  (outdoor)
  • Alice Campbell Alumni Center (outdoor)
  • SDRP (indoor)
  • CRCE (indoor)

We are offering a free non-credit course about COVID-19, led by Illinois experts

A new course, COV-Course: A Multidisciplinary Approach to Understanding the Pandemic, will offer a comprehensive, interdisciplinary understanding of the pandemic. The free course is open to the public.

We are encouraging our university community to get their flu shot.

Flu shots will be available through McKinley Health Center beginning September 14th.

We are encouraging students, faculty and staff to download the Safer in Illinois app.

The Safer Illinois app is an innovative tool to help our entire community maximize safety.

Thank you for your continued patience as we navigate COVID-19. Please feel free to direct questions to covid-19@illinois.edu.

Robert J. Jones

Chancellor

Massmail: Increased undergraduate enforcement of COVID-19 safety guidelines

The University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign’s Shield testing program has provided real-time data about on-campus testing results and any emerging trends, and its experts recently noticed a concerning upward trend of positive COVID-19 cases among undergraduate students.

To break the cycle, for the next two weeks the university is intensifying discipline efforts and swiftly removing individuals who have created this risk for the campus and the community.

For the next two weeks, the university expects all undergraduate students to significantly restrict in-person activities. From Wednesday, Sept. 2 through Wednesday, Sept. 16, undergraduate students should avoid gathering in small or large groups under any circumstances. They should only leave their residences for essential activities including:

  • Taking twice-weekly COVID-19 tests
  • Attending class
  • Purchasing groceries or food
  • Going to work
  • Engaging in individual outdoor activity
  • Attending religious services
  • Seeking medical attention.

View the full massmail.

Massmail: COV-Course – a free, non-credit course open to the public

A new University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign course, COV-Course: A Multidisciplinary Approach to Understanding the Pandemic, will offer a comprehensive, interdisciplinary understanding of the pandemic.

This non-credit course is free and open to the public. Classes will be live streamed online from 8:00–9:00 p.m. every Sunday evening during the fall semester, starting Sept. 6. Each session will be archived on covid19.illinois.edu.

The massmail is available online.

Weekly Update from Chancellor Jones (8/24 – 8/28)

We are providing more detailed information about the university’s on-campus testing program, including Labor Day hours.

On-campus testing is required for all students, faculty and staff participating in on-campus activities in the Fall 2020 semester.

View the testing locations and hours. Please note that the following testing sites will be open from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m. on Labor Day:

  • State Farm Center (indoor)
  • NCSA (outdoor)
  • Illini Union (indoor)
  • Washington Park (outdoor)
  • Vet Med  (outdoor)
  • Alice Campbell Alumni Center (outdoor)
  • SDRP (indoor)
  • CRCE (indoor)

We are displaying data from our on-campus testing program.

The testing dashboard displays recent data from the university’s on-campus testing efforts.

We are encouraging our university community to get their flu shot.

Flu shots will be available on campus beginning Sept. 14. Updates can be found on the McKinley Health Center website.

We are encouraging students, faculty and staff to download the Safer Illinois app.

The Safer Illinois app is an innovative tool to help our entire community maximize safety.

Thank you for your continued patience as we navigate COVID-19. Please feel free to direct questions to covid-19@illinois.edu.

Robert J. Jones

Chancellor

Weekly Update from Chancellor Jones (8/17 – 8/21)

We are now performing our rapid, saliva-based COVID-19 test under the umbrella of an approved FDA Emergency Use Authorization.

The testing protocol developed by Illinois researchers directly detects the coronavirus that causes COVID-19 in saliva samples. View the full list of testing location and hours across campus.

We are providing detailed information on building access procedures for the Fall 2020 semester.

The university is limiting access to on-campus facilities to individuals who are in compliance with safety requirements.

We are sharing information about COVID-19 testing results and procedures.

If you are a student, faculty or staff member and you test positive for COVID-19, there are processes that you need to follow.

We are providing health and support resources to students, faculty and staff.

Support resources are available to help you begin your academic year as smoothly as possible.

We are encouraging our university community to download the Safer Illinois app.

The Safer Illinois app is an innovative tool to help our entire community maximize safety.

We are informing you of new emergency orders in the community.

The cities of Champaign and Urbana recently issued emergency orders regarding the use of face coverings, parties and social gatherings.

We are sharing information to help the community respond to COVID-19.

Taking this survey provides feedback to Champaign County businesses and economic development leaders as they work to meet community needs.

Thank you for your continued patience as we navigate COVID-19. Please feel free to direct questions to covid-19@illinois.edu.

Robert J. Jones

Chancellor

Massmail: COVID-19 testing program results and expectations

Chancellor Robert Jones sent a new massmail answering this question: “What makes you think you can open the semester with in-person classes?”

As the massmail explains, the University of Illinois Urbana-Champaign can open with in-person classes because:

“we have our innovative new saliva-based test and the infrastructure to deploy that testing with the frequency and scale that we have put in place. This comprehensive testing allows for quick quarantine, public health contact tracing and rapid delivery of any necessary medical care.”

The message goes on to explain how well on-campus COVID-19 testing has worked so far:

“On Monday, we conducted about 10,000 tests. To put that in a national context, about 1.3 percent of all COVID-19 tests performed in the nation on that day were processed right here on campus.  

As our testing has accelerated this week, we have seen an increase in daily positive cases that is well within the expectations of our state and local public health officials and local hospitals. But the more important number to watch is our very low daily positivity rate. This is the percentage of people who test positive out of those who have been tested. This is a critical measure because it tells us how widespread the infection is here in our community and whether our levels of testing are keeping up with levels of disease transmission.

We have conducted more than 60,000 tests since we began the program in July. During this time we watched our daily positivity rate drop from about 1.5% to below 0.2%. The positivity rate this week has ranged between 0.3 and 0.5 percent. These rates are several times lower than the corresponding positivity rate for our Restore Illinois region and ten times below the maximum levels that the World Health Organization recommends”

“Data models developed by our faculty this summer predicted a few hundred new cases as people return to campus over the first few weeks of the semester with cases dropping off after that and a low daily positivity rate throughout. The actual results of this first week are very, very close to these predictions. We have been sharing these models with state and local health officials, our local city leaders and our community hospitals who have used the data in their own planning and preparations for these first weeks of the semester.

However, those same models very clearly show that our collective actions during these first two weeks will determine what the rest of our semester will look like. Testing alone will not contain the spread of the virus.

What will determine if we stay together in-person is whether we all can make the personal choices and exercise the very best judgement in these critical early days. Our testing can detect the virus quickly. But the only way we can prevent it from spreading in the first place is by wearing face coverings, washing our hands, practicing social distancing and avoiding crowds and situations that we know put many people at risk of exposure and put all of us at risk of having to return to fully remote operations as we did in the spring.

These next 10 or 15 days will define how we move forward from here.

It is our innovative spirit and the creativity of our own researchers that have given us this test that gives us a chance to overcome the challenges that have forced many other universities to move fully online.

But, in the end, it is the commitment and character of our students, faculty and staff to take hard, but necessary actions, and to exercise discipline and good judgement that will carry us forward.

We can do this. But we must do it together.”

The massmail is available online.