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Australia G7 Attendees to Quarantine at ANU Davey Lodge
by Woroni
KRISTINE LI GIAM
A group of Australian G7 Summit attendees are set to quarantine at ANU Davey Lodge upon return.
Currently empty, Davey Lodge will host 30 of the Prime Minister Morrison’s staff, journalists, and other officials of the Australian G7 delegation. This is due to the regular hotel used for quarantine has returned to providing normal service. Another 10 members of staff will quarantine in their homes. PM Morrison is currently quarantining at The Lodge, the PM’s main official residence, situated in Deakin.
An ACT Health spokesperson told Woroni that “the Commonwealth Government informed the ACT Government that they had contacted the ANU directly to arrange this accommodation around 10 days ago.”
In his recent blog, Vice Chancellor Schmidt stated that he is “very pleased the University can play our part to help return travellers safely to Australia”.
An ANU spokesperson stated that “ANU has already safely operated on-campus quarantine. We stand ready to do so again.”
Previously, ACT Health considered Davey Lodge unsuitable as a quarantine premises for international students, citing its lack of cooking and balcony facilities.
Regarding this, an ACT Health spokesperson stated “the ACT Government is happy to share feedback and findings from this quarantine period to the Commonwealth Government to inform National Cabinet decisions about the return of international students to Australia.”
insight: course cuts at anu worse than anticipated
JULIETTE BAXTER
When students went to enrol in courses this semester, many were faced with fewer options than years before, noticing that courses run in previous years had vanished. These concerns were amplified by a post in Schmidtposting claiming that 322 courses offered last year were not available this year. Woroni has obtained exclusive data from the University on the extent of the cuts, which reveal the situation is even more dire than previously anticipated.
In addition, the College of Asia-Pacific (CAP), College of Science (CoS) and College of Business and Economics (CBE) felt significant cuts to their course offerings. Fifty-four courses were cut from CAP, forty-eight from CoS and another thirty-six from the CBE.
Meanwhile, the College of Engineering and Computer Sciences (CECS) has been entirely unscathed, with no courses disestablished and even four new courses added in the past year.
As the result of an FOI request for information from the University, since the start of 2020, a total of 529 courses have been disestablished across the ANU. Of these 529 courses, 88 were taught in 2020, 50 had never been taught at all previously, 160 had been taught prior to 2016, and the rest had last been taught at an unspecified time between 20162019.
The College of Arts and Social Sciences (CASS) and the College of Law (CoL) had the most courses cut overall, with 126 courses disestablished from each college. Of these, only 28 were last taught in 2020 for CASS and 16 in 2020 for CoL.
Another 139 courses were cut ‘ANU Wide’. A University spokesperson clarified that this includes “courses taught by external third-party providers, courses for high school students under ANU extension, global exchange and some graduate and undergraduate non-award and cross-institutional arrangements.”
In the past year, 109 new courses were introduced across the University, but this does not diminish the significance of the total courses cut. Even with these new courses, there was a difference of 410 courses between semester one this year and the same time last year. Of the 109 new courses, 50 were within CASS, 28 in CoS, 14 in CAP, and 4 each in CECS and CBE. Thus, comparing cuts balanced against new courses, the College of Law appears to have taken the hardest hit.
These course cuts are reflective of the University’s broader financial concerns, with a financial deficit of $162.4 million announced in May, and ongoing staffing cuts. Though the exact number of jobs lost is unknown, cuts have been felt throughout the University. Reflective of the impact of course cuts, job cuts have been felt profoundly in CASS, CAP and the CoS.
College Breakdown of Courses Cut Over the Years