9-3-20 entire issue hi res

Page 1

INDEPENDENT SINCE 1880

The Corne¬ Daily Sun Vol. 137, No. 2

THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 3, 2020

n

8 Pages – Free

ITHACA, NEW YORK

News

Dining

Sports

Weather

Election Section

Quarantine Eats

Heptathlete

Warm and Overcast

Profiles of Rep. Tom Reed (R-N.Y.) and Tracy Mitrano J.D. ’95, currently vying for New York’s 23rd District. | Page 3

Students stuck in quarantine find their Cornell-provided food to be lackluster. | Page 4

Junior Beatrice Juskeviciute quickly ascended the ranks of Track and Field to become a potential Olympian. | Page 8

HIGH: 82º LOW: 61º

TCHD Reports 25 COVID-19 Cases on Wednesday

Largest single-day increase since March Pollack: 100 cases will not shut down semester By MEGHANA SRIVASTAVA and SEAN O’CONNELL Sun Assistant News Editor and Sun News Editor

Tompkins County Health Department announced 25 new cases on Wednesday night, 14 of which are associated with a previously-identified Cornell-related cluster. The cluster, which was first reported last Friday, began with nine identified cases, and then grew by an additional 12 to 21, the health department said on Tuesday. With today’s 14 additional cases, the cluster has grown to a total of 35 — accounting for the vast majority of Cornell’s 42 new cases reported in the past week. Four of the new cases are students from Tompkins Cortland Community College — which announced that it would go remote on Thursday and Friday to allow for contact tracing — while the remaining cases are local residents. The health department attributed the sharp increase to “multiple small gatherings where social distancing and mask-wearing were not adhered to.” Specific locations or the size of the gatherings were not disclosed. The health department reiterated that even in small gatherings, individuals must adhere to mask wearing and social distancing procedures.

“A small number of people have had a large negative impact on our community and their peers. This is not the way any of us hoped to start the semester, but it is the reality we are living,” wrote TCHD Public Health Director Frank Kruppa in a press release. The first Cornell cluster prompted a stern email from Vice President of Student and Campus Life Ryan Lombardi on Sunday, who similarly urged students that “now is not the

By ALEX HALE Sun News Editor

On a day when Tompkins County’s new COVID-19 cases spiked to their highest point since the pandemic began, President Martha E. Pollack said that the number of positives needed for Cornell to halt in-person operations is getting smaller. In an email sent to the Cornell community on Wednesday night, Pollack explained the implications of Gov. Andrew Cuomo’s (D-N.Y.) order requiring colleges “A small number of people have had a large negative with more than 100 new cases reported in impact on our community and their peers.” a single week to temporarily halt in-perTCHD Public Health Director Frank Kruppa son instruction. Just hours later, time to test boundaries.” According the Tompkins County Department of Health to Lombardi, some students were announced that 18 more Cornell students had placed on temporary suspension tested positive for the virus, bringing the lastfor violating Cornell’s Behavioral week total to 42 cases. Compact, which places strict limits The sharp uptick comes just as the University on the size of gatherings and manis set to roll out its surveillance testing today, dates the use of face coverings. an ambitious program that will dramatically The previous largest single-day increase the pace and scope of coronavirus monincrease in Tompkins County cases itoring. As Cornell inches closer to the threshold was on March 27, when 16 new under which students would have to go online, cases were announced. The county Pollack cautioned that the increased testing currently has 57 active COVID-19 means staying under 100 new weekly cases will cases — also the highest recorded become even more challenging. number since the start of the pandemic. “Staying below the new limit will be extremely difficult, and make no mistake: there is no Meghana Srivastava can be reached at guarantee of success,” the President wrote, strikmsrivastava@cornellsun.com. ing a pessimistic note on the odds the University

will be able to meet New York State’s new rules. “We’re testing so many people, with the very goal of identifying all of the cases of the virus — even in asymptomatic people,” further explained Vice President for University Relations Joel Malina at a Wednesday Ithaca Common Council meeting. “So, with that approach we are going to have a higher number of cases than if we hadn’t done that. It means more than likely we will reach this threshold.” If Cornell’s COVID-19 cases reach more than triple digits in a single week, campus life will have to become more socially-distant than it already is. It would not, however, end Cornell’s attempt to have an on-campus semester or fully shut operations down, according to President Martha E. Pollack. Instead, in-person activities would have to be cut down even more for a period of 14 days. “For a two-week period, all teaching moves online, dining halls move to take-out meals only and a variety of other campus activities are reduced or suspended,” Pollack wrote. Students would not have to quarantine in their residences in this scenario, either. The president said that only those “who are in quarantine for cause” — meaning they have tested positive or were connected to someone who did — would have to isolate during this period. Cuomo’s order came just days after Provost Michael Kotlikoff announced Cornell’s self-imposed guidelines, which suggested that the University could experience around 250 new weekly cases before being forced to reconsider its current plans. Alex Hale can be reached at ahale@cornellsun.com.

MICHAEL SUGUITAN / SUN STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER

Homecoming | Students don masks on Ho

By WESLEY ROGERS

Plaza on the first day of classes.

Sun Staff Writer

Missing Financial Aid Still Looms Over Students By FAITH FISHER and TAMARA KAMIS Sun Staff Writers

Students crisscrossed the Arts Quad and logged into Zoom meetings as the fall semester kicked off on Wednesday — but for some students, the question of how they will pay for the upcoming semester still remains unresolved. As classes begin, many students have said that they still don’t have financial aid, raising concerns about whether they will have the help they need to pay tuition and avoid being put on financial hold. The deadline for the first tuition payment is Sept. 7, less than five days away. “I have not yet received my

2020-21 financial aid offer. When can I expect it?” is on the Financial Matters FAQ list for Cornell, indicating that financial aid delays may be a widespread concern. The administration has not yet explained the slowdown, which has compromised some students’ ability to pay tuition for the upcoming semester. After multiple phone calls and an email, Cornell Media Relations referred the Sun to the Financial Matters FAQs. Notably, these financial aid delays are not normal — in previous years, many students reported receiving their financial aid offers for the fall semester during the previous spring semester. And those delays can prove to

be costly. Students unable to pay for tuition may have to deal with a hold on class registration, according to a financial responsibility agreement signed before enrollment, as well as difficulties dealing with the costs of living in Ithaca. Tomás Reuning ’21, one of the students who has not yet received his financial aid, says the delay could jeopardize his ability to pay rent. Reuning said he has not been given a reason for the delay. Some students initially received insufficient financial aid packages, like Olubunmi Osias ’21, who was not told what had caused the error. Her aid was subsequently increased to reflect her role as a West Campus residential advisor by not requiring work study or

student contribution. Nick Cicero ’21 just got his financial aid package resolved on Sept. 2. Although he is relieved to have received his aid before the billing deadline, the process was piecemeal, time-consuming and frustrating. He first received the information that he had documents missing from his application in mid-August. According to Cicero, he called the office every day for a week to get questions answered and struggled to get clear information in a reasonable timeframe. “There were some days where they would answer right away, and somewhere I would be on hold for over an hour,” Cicero said. “They wouldn’t give me an exact date as

to when I would have a decision. I just said, ‘how am I supposed to pay my tuition by Sept. 7 if I don’t have my financial aid by then?’” Cicero finally got his financial aid on the first day of classes, just five days before his bill is due. According to Cicero, he would often provide the office with additional documentation only to be told the office required even more paperwork from him. “It was frustrating that they couldn’t just tell me all at once what was missing. If they had told me at first everything I was missing, I wouldn’t have just gotten my decision today,” Cicero said. Faith Fisher can be reached at ffisher@cornellsun.com.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.