THE PEPPERDINE GRAPHIC VOLUME LI | ISSUE 6 | OCTOBER 15, 2021 | PEPPERDINE-GRAPHIC.COM | FOLLOW US @PEPPGRAPHIC
STUDENTS EXPRESS CONFUSION OVER QUARANTINE AND ISOLATION (Left) A cartoon COVID-19 virus, at the Mt. Crags Conference Center, sadly looks to the Malibu campus as it prepares to go into isolation for a weeklong quarantine. (Right) Happy, healthy cartoon bubbles hold hands on the Malibu Campus. ILLUSTRATION BY ALI LEVENS | CREATIVE DIRECTOR, PHOTOS BY ALI LEVENS | CREATIVE DIRECTOR AND DANE BRUHAHN | ASSISTANT PHOTO EDITOR
LIZA ESQUIBIAS NEWS ASSISTANT Pepperdine’s COVID-19 quarantine and isolation guidelines raise questions from community members, causing confusion and concern for some students. There are two designated quarantine facilities for Pepperdine students — Villa Graziadio and Mt. Crags Conference Center. When vaccinated students become exposed to COVID-19 or any student tests positive for the virus, the University sends them to a facility to be kept out of contact with staff and other students. Residential Life staff and the Student Health Center work together to evaluate and enforce rules to keep the Uni-
W H AT ’ S AHE A D THE WAVES REPORT
versity safe, Director of Residence Life Maura Page said. Students like first-year student Liam Zieg, however, said they experienced a lack of communication and mixed messages from the school. “We really are the guinea pigs of the whole COVID and quarantine and isolation stuff,” Zieg said. Facilities More than 100 Seaver College students have isolated in University-run facilities with positive COVID-19 test results since classes began in August, Medical Director at the SHC Dr. Lucy Larson wrote in an email to the Graphic. Forty unvaccinated students had to quarantine as a result of being
in close contact, Larson wrote. The Mt. Crags Conference Center has small houses where students isolate together and individual rooms for isolation and quarantine, Page said. The Villa offers single rooms with private bathrooms. Since the Villa is located on campus, Page said, Resident Directors do not live in the facility. Page said the University provides medical transport for students, and the SHC organizes room arrangements. All students in quarantine, Page said, stay in individual rooms, while isolated students with positive test results can be placed together at the discretion of the University’s medical professionals. The University used trailers in Rho Parking Lot for quar-
antine purposes but stopped in mid-September because the other facilities had sufficient capacity, Larson wrote. Still, many students who tested positive for COVID-19 the first few weeks of school, such as first-year Race Skrmetta, spent their 10 days of isolation there. Skrmetta said the trailer had five bedrooms with 10 total beds and one shower. Expecting to spend the isolation alone, Skrmetta said he was surprised when other students began showing up to his trailer. “Even though there were only three of us in there, they had all of us in the same room, which was a little weird,” Skrmetta said. Having eight people liv-
ing in a trailer was distracting from schoolwork and also made it more difficult to rest and recover from COVID-19, Skrmetta said. “We were all in different classes at different times; there was one desk per room, so if there was more than one person per room, you had to go to the common area table,” Skrmetta said. “And then there were more people out there, and it just got very, very hectic sometimes during the day.” First-year student Delanie Carpenter said she is unvaccinated and had to quarantine at both the Villa and the conference center after coming into close contact with a positive case.
SEE COVID | A4
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PER S PEC TI VE S
LI FE & ART S
SP O RT S
Print columnist A2- Fine Addison Whiten
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Addison Rae stars B3- TikTok’s in “She’s All That” remake.
and Orange B5- Blue Madness presents Pepp’s
by One returns to inB4- Won person and live concerts.
golf looks to B7- Men’s repeat their national
criticizes mountain lion notifications.
Weekend returns to A6- Waves Malibu, bringing family and fun to campus.
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Staff Editorial: Pepperdine’s parking problems create pain for students. Read more Perspectives content online.
SAT: 1-2 FT
SUN: 1-2 FT
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basketball teams.
championship.
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(DEEPSWELL.COM)