Policy Matters
Blog Home All Blogs
Search all posts for:   

 

View all (105) posts »

Policy Changes on Steroids and I'm Over It

Posted By Meg Resue, Rowan College of South Jersey, Tuesday, December 8, 2020

Approaching the End of 2020

The monitoring, updating and revising of policy and administrative procedures is a deliberative process requiring significant time to decipher law, collaborate with the appropriate parties, draft, vet and finalize for presidential and Board of Trustees approval. For some policies and procedures, the pandemic has taken the normal expected sequencing and placed it on steroids, accelerating the process.

By the first week of March 2020, the college’s cabinet began to meet for conference calls with state government officials to discuss an imminent pandemic heading our way. During the second week, a campus Coronavirus (COVID-19) medical taskforce was established. In addition, a credentialed medical director to co-chair the taskforce was soon installed to facilitate college communications and practices, as well as to collaborate with state and local health departments to track the scientific details on COVID-19, including medical statistics showing the virus’ insidious trajectory. By week three, faculty and staff were thrust into working from home by a state stay-at-home executive order, while simultaneously tasked with flipping all classes to an online delivery during the very same week that students were off campus on spring break, with the aim of being ready to begin the new semester upon their return.

After all these operational challenges unfolded, there was catch-up work to be done in order to get policy and administrative procedures appropriately revised within the areas of operations, academics, student services and human resources. Everything needed to align with state issued executive orders that seemed to emerge almost on a weekly basis. Once the stay-at-home executive order eased to a lower level phase, the college was able to bring faculty, staff and students back to campus. The number of individuals allowed back was limited with strict mandated medical protocols implemented. This action spurred yet another round of fast-tracked policy and administrative procedure revisions in the areas listed above. This in turn triggered the issuance of communication plan updates to the college community and local governmental authorities, and additional restart plan submissions to the state. With each state executive order issued, there may have been and, in many cases, most did impact some aspect of standing policy and procedure practices. This has resulted in our new normal of a rapid-fire, expedient policy process – at least for now.

As the month of December wanes, from a human resources policy perspective, it is necessary to keep an eye on the federal mandate regarding the Families First Coronavirus Response Act (FFCRA), which has been in effective since April 1, 2020, ending December 31, 2020. The question - will this mandate be extended or will it lapse? The answer will dictate policy revision. Time will tell; uncertainty prevails.

Professionally, 2020 has proceeded with the most frenetic momentum and I am ready, more than ready, to have this aspect of the higher education realm return to what I once considered its mind-boggling glacial pace – I miss those days; really, what was I thinking – glacial pace!

The good news is a COVID-19 vaccine is on the horizon. Better days will come. I wish everyone a safe, healthy and happy holiday season.

Tags:  challenges  COVID-19  executive orders  federal mandates  hope  Meg Resue  pandemic  policy 

Permalink | Comments (3)
 

Comments on this post...

Gina Kennedy, NOSM University says...
Posted Tuesday, December 8, 2020
Excellent and thank you...nailed it
Permalink to this Comment }

Cara O'Sullivan, Utah Valley University says...
Posted Tuesday, December 8, 2020
Oh I so relate to this post. Thanks for keeping it real. I can't tell you how much I admire our faculty, our administration, and our staff for turning on a dime and working countless hours to keep us safe and the institution's education mission going.
Permalink to this Comment }

Brenda van Gelder, Virginia Tech says...
Posted Thursday, December 10, 2020
Thank you for this excellent and detailed blog post. As someone who focuses only on IT policies, I can say that the dramatic and significant increase in the use of information technologies during the pandemic has certainly kept our team on our toes.

It's always interesting, and sometimes surprising, to see the unique ways folks find to leverage technology for accomplishing what needs to get done. Not always in ways that are compliant, unfortunately. So keeping policies up to date and clear on those issues is key.
Permalink to this Comment }