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Pandemic at 1 Year: Getting Through It, Together

One year ago, Wednesday, March 18, Chancellor Gary S. May suspended campus operations due to the pandemic, and two days later he issued his first “Checking In With Chancellor May” letter to the campus community, including students’ parents.

He got right to the point in that March 20 letter: “Last night, as you know, Gov. Gavin Newsom issued a stay-at-home order for the entire state. The day before, we announced we were suspending operations, meaning most of our employees should already be at home where the governor wants you to be, and where we want you to be, for the sake of your own health and to help limit the spread of the coronavirus.”

Chancellor Gary S. May in Aggies face mask.
Chancellor May

The letter also brought news of the first case of COVID-19 at the university (an employee at °ϲĻϢ Davis Health), provided information on remote instruction for the spring quarter, told students about a laptop loaner program, and advised employees about teleworking options and paid administrative leave.

“I am proud of how all of you are stepping up to meet the COVID-19 challenge, supporting our community and making do during all the disruption,” the chancellor wrote. “From Davis to Sacramento and beyond, our university will continue its 105-year mission of teaching, research and public service.

“We will get through this, together.”

Indeed, that is exactly what we have done, amid all the disruption to our lives and work, all while grieving the pandemic’s death toll.

“The loss of life is heartbreaking,” Chancellor May said. “But we can be so very proud of °ϲĻϢ Davis’ role in COVID-19 patient care, research, outreach, testing and vaccination programs — knowing that we are giving our all to fighting this virus.”

At the same time, he said, “We have come together as a community to take care of one another during these historic times. Our students, staff and faculty give me hope as we prepare to welcome everyone back in the fall.”

Here is a timeline of events and reports leading up to the suspension of campus operations, and what has transpired since then:

JANUARY 2020
  • Jan. 21 — °ϲĻϢ Davis publishes a list of our experts who can comment on the novel coronavirus. One of them becomes a household name in the media: Dean Blumberg, chief of pediatric infectious diseases at °ϲĻϢ Davis Children’s Hospital.
  • Jan. 30 — The °ϲĻϢ Office of the President advises university affiliates to , based on federal guidance.
FEBRUARY 2020
  • Feb. 25 — °ϲĻϢ Davis launches a coronavirus website with information on the virus and campus operations.
  • Feb. 26 — °ϲĻϢ Davis Health announces it is treating .
°ϲĻϢ Davis Health timeline:
  • Feb. 26 — °ϲĻϢOP issues a directive for faculty, staff and students to to countries with a CDC Warning-Level 3 Travel Notice.
  • Feb. 27 — Three °ϲĻϢ Davis students are in quarantine or isolation after one of them may have been exposed to the coronavirus and subsequently exposed the other two. Yolo County Public Health reported two days later the first student had tested negative. The other two had been released from isolation.
Hand-washing station
  • Feb. 27 — °ϲĻϢ Davis announces sanitizing and physical distancing measures.
  • Feb. 28 — University leaders urge members of the campus community to take an active role in associated with COVID-19.
MARCH 2020
  • March 6 — Yolo County confirms first positive case of COVID-19.
  • March 7 — °ϲĻϢ Davis leaders issue a letter confirming there are no COVID-19 cases on the Davis campus and adding that, after careful review and consultation with health experts, the campus will not mandate the cancellation of in-person instruction the week of March 9 (the week before finals). “However, we are advising maximum flexibility and encouraging faculty or students who either should not or do not wish to attend in-person classes to complete the work of the quarter via alternate means.”
  • March 11 — The World Health Organization declares COVID-19 a global pandemic.
  • March 11 — °ϲĻϢ Davis issues guidelines to continue research operations.
  • March 11-12 — °ϲĻϢ Davis bans spectators from sports and one day later suspends winter and spring sports.
Women prepare loaner laptops for distribution.
Student Emily Mijangos checks out a laptop from Anita Nichols of Information and Educational Technology. (Bonnie Hain-Anderson/°ϲĻϢ Davis)
  • March 12 — Chancellor May joins with Academic Senate Chair Kristin Lagattuta in announcing the cancellation of in-person finals.
  • March 14 — Chancellor May announces remote instruction for spring quarter.
  • March 15 — Attendance cap for campus events lowered to 50.
  • March 16-20 — The administration allows maximum flexibility for final exams, to be held remotely.
  • March 16 — °ϲĻϢ Davis suspends study abroad programs.
  • March 17 — °ϲĻϢOP releases guidelines for paid leave.
  • March 17 — City of Davis issues shelter-in-place guidelines.
  • March 18 — Yolo County and Sacramento County issue shelter-in-place orders.
  • March 18 — Chancellor May announces suspended operations.
  • March 22 — First death in Yolo County from COVID-19. [Almost a year later, 190 people have died of COVID-19 in Yolo County, according to the .]
COVID-19 pill (photo illustration)
  • March 26 — °ϲĻϢ Davis Health announces two clinical drug studies to treat COVID-19.
  • March 31 — Yolo County extends shelter-in-place order to May 1.
APRIL 2020
  • April 8 — °ϲĻϢ Davis announces .
  • April 17-18 — In this unprecdented time, Give Day, a virtual event this year, raises a record $2.5 million.
  • April 18 — °ϲĻϢ Davis hosts virtual Picnic Day.
  • April 23 — Distinguished Professor Walter Leal holds the first in a series of COVID-19 public awareness symposia.
  • April 27 — Yolo County orders people to wear face coverings in public.
  • April 30 — Yolo County extends shelter-in-place order to May 31.
MAY 2020
  • May 7 — °ϲĻϢ Davis LIVE makes its debut, a biweekly livestream with experts on issues surrounding the coronavirus. Deans Discuss: COVID-19, a video podcast with Allison Brashear, School of Medicine, and Michael Lairmore, School of Veterinary Medicine, would debut later in the month.
Kevin Blue holds baby.
Pandemic Portrait: Then-Director of Athletics Kevin Blue and daughter Maya, last spring. (Karin Higgins/°ϲĻϢ Davis)
  • May 26 — The Office of Strategic Communications releases a series of .
  • May 28 — °ϲĻϢ Davis prepares to gradually reopen campus facilities and operations.
  • May 29 — Yolo County announces end of shelter-in-place order.
JUNE 2020
  • June 2 — Davis campus moves to “reduced operations,” a step up from “suspended.”
  • June 16 — °ϲĻϢ Davis will welcome back students for fall 2020 if county and state health guidelines permit, and plans to offer a mix of in-person and remote instruction.
JULY 2020
  • July 31 — °ϲĻϢ Davis drafts a new Emergency Public Health Policy to bolster compliance with public health measures. “I know these efforts are only effective when we as a community do them together,” the chancellor writes in his Friday letter. “I also know the Aggie community is strong and I am proud to be a part of the effort to stop the spread.”
AUGUST 2020
  • Aug. 21 —
  • Aug. 28 —
SEPTEMBER 2020
  • Sept. 4 — °ϲĻϢ Davis is hiring up to 250 students to be Aggie Public Health Ambassadors, models of healthy behavior who will be deployed at high-traffic locations across campus asking bare-faced passersby to cover up.
  • Sept. 18 — The campus and the city of Davis establish the Healthy Davis Together partnership to help prevent outbreaks when thousands of students take up residence for the new academic year. Says Chancellor May: “We developed a plan that has components around technology, epidemiology and, more importantly, modifying behavior. Not just students but all community members.”
  • Sept. 21-24 — Campus housing welcomes students for Moove-In, but only after they are tested for COVID-19. This marks the beginning of the asymptomatic testing program that will go on to receive national attention. To date, the program has analyzed more than 420,000 saliva samples from campus and community.
  • Sept. 25-29 — Freshman virtual orientation.
  • Sept. 30 — Yolo County moves up from purple to red tier in state’s coronavirus reopening plan. Select indoor operations may resume.
OCTOBER 2020
  • Oct. 7 — °ϲĻϢ’s prohibition on all nonessential university international travel remains in place. Requests for international travel must be submitted three weeks before departure date. Domestic travel is strongly discouraged
  • Oct. 16 —
  • Oct. 16 — Chancellor May announces fall commencements will be virtual.
  • Oct.  31 — Students celebrate Halloween safely, within their own households, with Healthy Davis Together grants to pay for costumes and decorations and such activities as pumpkin carving. More than 600 students applied for the grants, for activities involving some 2,500 students.
ARC testing kiosk
Testing kiosk at the Activities and Recreation Center. (Anjie Cook/°ϲĻϢ Davis)
NOVEMBER 2020
  • Nov. 6 — °ϲĻϢ Davis’ saliva-based system of asymptomatic testing has been validated, thus ending the need for duplicate testing by nasal swab.
  • Nov. 13 — The campus testing program expands to take in all employees and students.
  • Nov. 17 — Yolo County drops back into the purple tier
  • Nov. 17 — °ϲĻϢ Davis announces it is participating in a pilot project of the California COVID-19 Notify app that can tell people of their potentially having been exposed to the virus.
DECEMBER 2020
  • Dec. 1 — COVID-19 testing is now required for entry to any Davis campus facility.
  • Dec. 8 — New Staff Emergency Fund starts taking applications after hitting initial fundraising target of $30,000.
  • Dec. 9 — All indoor activity has been paused, including Aggie men’s and women’s basketball.
  • Dec. 10 — Yolo County will be subject to the state’s regional stay-at-home order, effective at 11:59 p.m.
  • Dec. 18 — Virtual fall commencement.
JANUARY 2021
  • Jan. 11 — The University of California announces all 10 campuses will resume in-person instruction in fall 2021.
  • Jan. 25 — California lifts statewide stay-at-home order.
A °ϲĻϢ Davis student EMT administering a COVID-19 vaccine at a campus clinic.
Student EMT Brittney Novak administers a shot at the Davis campus vaccine clinic. (Anjie Cook/°ϲĻϢ Davis)
 FEBRUARY 2021
  • Feb. 1 — °ϲĻϢ Davis opens Davis campus vaccine clinic for employees and students as they become eligible under the state’s phased distribution plan.
  • Feb. 26 — The Fall Planning Work Group, comprising representatives from several areas of campus leadership, holds its first meeting. They are addressing issues relating to the resumption of in-person instruction, research and on-campus activities in the fall.
  • Feb. 27 — The delayed 2020 football season is delayed again when Cal Poly, having had to pause its preseason practices over concerns surrounding the COVID-19 pandemic, postpones its visit to °ϲĻϢ Davis Health Stadium. The Mustangs and Aggies are now set to play March 20 in °ϲĻϢ Davis’ home opener.
MARCH 2021
  • March 12 — Healthy Davis Together is encouraging students to stay on campus or in town for spring break — and offering $75 grants to pay for projects and activities. Two-thousand-five-hundred grants will be distributed during the break.

Media Resources

Compiled by Casandra Cortez, emergency communications intern, and Dave Jones, Dateline editor, both with the News and Media Relations Team, Office of Strategic Communications.

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