Coronavirus

Most UC campuses, including Davis, will start 2022 classes online-only due to omicron

At least seven of the University of California campuses, including UC Davis, will delay their return to on-campus learning in early 2022, switching to remote instruction for at least part of January in response to the omicron variant of COVID-19.

Instruction for the winter quarter is set to begin Jan. 3 at eight of the system’s 10 campuses. UC Davis leadership announced Tuesday the campus will switch to remote learning for the first week, Jan. 3 to Jan. 7.

The six other undergraduate campuses on the quarter system — UC Riverside, UC San Diego, UC Irvine, UC Santa Cruz, UCLA and UC Santa Barbara — in separate announcements Tuesday announced a longer period of two weeks in remote learning, all planning to return to on-campus instruction Jan. 18, the day after Martin Luther King Jr. Day.

UC Berkeley and UC Merced, which run on a semester system rather than quarters, are not slated to return from their regularly scheduled winter break until Jan. 18. Neither university has announced any changes to in-person instruction, nor has UC San Francisco, a medical school on the quarter system.

Michael V. Drake, president of the University of California who is also a physician, sent a letter to the system’s 10 chancellors Tuesday, asking them “to design and implement a plan for a January return to campus that mitigates public health impacts, responds to the unique circumstances facing your campus, and maintains our teaching and research operations.”

“This may require campuses to begin the term using remote instruction in order to allow students to complete an appropriate testing protocol as they return to campus,” the letter continued, in part. “Given the differences in local conditions and campus operations across the University, the length of this remote instruction period may vary from campus to campus.”

On Tuesday afternoon, UC Davis Chancellor Gary May announced that winter quarter classes will resume remotely for the first week, from Jan. 3 through Jan. 7. That will give campus community members enough time to “secure a negative COVID-19 test” before attending classes or returning to work in person Jan. 10, he said in an update to the UC Davis winter quarter schedule posted online.

May said it’s critical to return before Jan. 3 and get a COVID test for people who leave the Davis area over winter break.

“Testing our entire community within just one week will put a strain on our operations, so please do not wait until January 6 or 7 to schedule your test,” May said in the online update. “We need to work together to get this done quickly in order to keep our campus healthy.”

Campus administration had planned to discontinue its COVID testing mandate for vaccinated people in mid-January. But May said they are now going to continue the campus fall quarter requirement of testing every two weeks for fully vaccinated people and testing every four days for unvaccinated people.

And May said UC Davis will enforce a UC system-wide mandate for a booster vaccine for all faculty, staff and students who do not have a vaccine exemption currently in place. By Jan. 31, everyone on campus must upload proof of receiving a vaccination booster through the UC Davis Health e-Messaging portal.

“If you have not already received a booster, we strongly encourage you to do so over winter break,” the UC Davis chancellor said. “If the timing of your original vaccination leaves you ineligible for a booster by January 31, you must submit confirmation that you have received a booster within fourteen days of becoming eligible.”

He said campus officials over the next few days will update the upcoming testing schedule on the Campus Ready website and send out information directly to students about housing and dining.

May applauded students, faculty and staff for their hard work in helping the UC Davis campus remain open throughout the fall quarter.

“Even as the COVID-19 Delta variant caused surges of infection elsewhere, our case rate stayed remarkably low,” May said in his update. “Whether on-campus or off-campus, Davis could boast, without exaggeration, of being one of the healthiest places in the nation during this pandemic.”

The UC Riverside and UC San Diego chancellors’ offices in statements around noon Tuesday announced that instruction will be remote-only for two weeks. UC Irvine and UC Santa Cruz made similar announcements a short time later, the latter doing so in a Twitter thread, followed later in the day by UCLA and UC Santa Barbara.

“UC San Diego is exercising caution and moving our instruction to a remote-only mode from Jan. 3 to Jan. 17,” Chancellor Pradeep K. Khosla wrote. “During this time we will incrementally populate the campus using a more comprehensive testing regimen.”

Courses at UC Riverside “will be delivered remotely for the first two weeks of the winter quarter, with exceptions for off-campus field courses and internships that may continue to meet in-person,” wrote Kim A. Wilcox, chancellor of UC Riverside.

“The quarter will begin on Jan. 3 with remote instruction, and we expect to return to our planned winter quarter modes of instruction the week of Jan. 17,” Wilcox continued.

UC San Diego’s statement did not include mentions of field courses or internships.

The universities said students will be allowed in on-campus housing, but that indoor, in-person gatherings will not be permitted.

In his letter, Drake also asked chancellors “to communicate the critical importance of (COVID-19 vaccine) boosters to your campus community, especially at this stage of the pandemic.”

This story was originally published December 21, 2021 at 1:09 PM.

CORRECTION: A previous version of this story incorrectly referred to UC Berkeley as the only University of California campus that uses a semester schedule rather than quarters. UC Merced also uses semesters and is scheduled to resume instruction Jan. 18.

Corrected Dec 21, 2021
Michael McGough
The Sacramento Bee
Michael McGough is a sports and local editor for The Sacramento Bee. He previously covered breaking news and COVID-19 for The Bee, which he joined in 2016. He is a Sacramento native and graduate of Sacramento State. 
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