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CLARION citrus college
Online at
ccclarion.com VOL LXXV • Issue 2
September 7, 2021
COVID-19 tests required BY SKYLR SCOTT
NEWS EDITOR
SSCOT T@CCCLARION.COM
COVID-19 testing will be available from 9 a.m. to 1 p.m Monday through Thursday and 9 a.m. to noon on Fridays. A negative test will be reported on the CitrusMobile pre-screening app, and positive tests will prohibit someone from returning to campus for at least 10 days, or until a negative test is taken. On Aug. 31, Citrus College sent an email to staff and students regarding updated COVID-19 precautions, including mandatory testing for everyone on campus. The email said once a week, students are required to take a rapid COVID-19 test the entire fall semester and that more information will be sent out on when and where to go for testing. Staff and faculty will have the option of taking self-testing kits or going to a local clinic. The message was sent a week after the semester started, after students had already begun taking
on-campus classes, not privy to the new testing mandate. Before the semester, Citrus implemented a voluntary testing program for all employees and students, but has now made it mandatory. Director of Human Resources Robert Sammis said testing will take place in the Haugh performing arts lobby and “students should expect later in this week to get a notice.” He said the college is going to start the testing program for employees this week and hopefully have tests ready for students when they return from Labor day weekend. The tests are minimally invasive and free of cost. “Given the continuing high level of cases in LA County of coronavirus and the spread of the Delta variant, as part of our line of defense to keep as many cases offcampus as possible, we determined that it made sense to go ahead and do mandatory testing,” Sammis said.
Read Tests, Page 4
JUSTIN GEORGE - STAFF PHOTOGRAPHER
Linebacker Isaiah Rosas finishes a 105 pound lift on Sept. 1 in the weight room before practicing on the field. For more sports coverage and game information turn to page 3.
Phantom student numbers decline
New security measures make it hard for fake students to apply BY JUSTIN GEORGE
MANAGING EDITOR
JGEORGE@CCCLARION.COM
PHOTO ILLUSTRATION FROM PIXABAY
Club memberships have gone down BY NATALIE CASTILLO
STAFF REPORTER
CONTACT@CCCLARION.COM
Clubs on campus have been negatively impacted by COVID-19 because it has become more difficult to find and accept new members. Clubs that are not meeting on campus are the College Church club, the Latino club, and the friendship club. There is no known date to when clubs will be able to gather together again since the
campus reopened in the fall. Nicholas Paulson, advisor of the real estate club, finds Zoom to be a limitation on club activities. “The COVID restrictions affected our exposure as a club and what we can do physically as a group,” Paulson said. “Only one person can talk at a time. It’s hard to break them up into groups on zoom.” Since the clubs aren’t able to meet in-person, members don’t
Read Clubs, Page 4
After experiencing an alarming number of “phantom” enrollments since the spring, Citrus is beginning to see a steady decrease in enrollment fraud. Gerald Sequeira, Citrus College’s dean of enrollment services, said in a phone interview that disenrollments peaked in the spring at 972 students. During the summer session, the
college purged 49 enrollments. This semester, only two have been purged so far. Although it is hard to confirm those are fraudulent enrollments, Sequeira said, the accounts showed signs of potential fraud. A total of 3,541 student accounts have been flagged for suspicious activity since winter session for a variety of reasons, Sequeira said. Some accounts exhibited tell-tale signs of fraud, including groups enrolled in common
CRNs, multiple iterations of the same name and international IP addresses. Sequeira said there are more mechanisms in place to prevent enrollment fraud now than in March. “We’re choking it at the starting point, so we’re not playing this cat-and-mouse game anymore.” The California Community Colleges Technology Center is
Read Security, Page 4
ASCC senator appointed president Four months after student government elections, a president takes office BY JUSTIN GEORGE
MANAGING EDITOR
JGEORGE@CCCLARION.COM
A new president was appointed to the ASCC executive board without a formal announcement. Daniel Caldera, who took office as a senator in Citrus’s student government on April 22, was elected president by the executive board on July 21, Student Life Supervisor Rosario Garcia said in an email interview. Caldera “showed interest in the president position and gave the board a statement of why he should be elected,” Garcia said, and was
CALDERA
subsequently elected. The results of ASCC’s April election revealed a small executive board consisting of a legislative
liaison, student trustee and three senators, but no president or vice president. ASCC’s constitution says that the executive board’s elective officers shall consist of a president, vice president, student trustee, legislative liaison and up to seven senators. It also says that the executive board may nominate members to fill vacancies after 10 days if the president has not appointed anyone. Caldera was emailed Wednesday for an interview, but did not respond by print deadline to confirm availability.