The Tufts Daily - Thursday, April 14, 2022

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T HE T UFTS DAILY

VOLUME LXXXIII, ISSUE 45

tuftsdaily.com

Thursday, April 14, 2022

MEDFORD/SOMERVILLE, MASS.

The Mods and quarantine hotels near capacity, students may have to isolate in residence halls by Flora Meng

Deputy News Editor

Tufts announced revised COVID-19 isolation procedures in an email to the university-wide community on April 13 as The Mods and hotel rooms used for isolation neared capacity. The email was signed by Dean of Student Affairs Camille Lizarríbar, University Infection Control Health Director Michael Jordan and Medical Director of Health Service Marie Caggiano. “We are doing everything possible to secure additional isolation rooms in local hotels; however, if the number of students needing isolation exceeds our isolation housing’s capacity, COVID positive students who live on campus may need to isolate in their residence hall rooms,” they wrote. According to the new guidelines, students who test positive will receive an email from university staff with instructions for isolation. All COVID-19-positive students are expected to remain in their residence halls until they

GRAPHIC BY ALEX VIVEROS have received their isolation information. If The Mods or hotel isolation options are full by the time a student tests positive, their quarantine procedure will depend on where they live. Students living on campus in a double or triple will be given priority to isolate in The Mods or in a hotel. If no rooms are available, students living in a shared dormitory space

will be required to isolate in their room. Students living on campus “who can return to their permanent home address without getting on a plane, train, bus, or other form of public transit” will be required to complete their isolation at home. Students living off campus will continue to isolate in their off-campus home if they test positive.

Somerville City Council bans crisis pregnancy centers by Emily Thompson Deputy News Editor

The Somerville City Council passed an ordinance on March 24 banning crisis pregnancy centers, defining them as deceptive, limited services pregnancy centers that do not directly provide or refer clients for abortions or emergency contraception. The ordinance was championed by Somerville City Councilor-at-Large Kristen Strezo and co-sponsored by the entire city council. Failure to

comply with the ordinance may result in a fine of $300. “I’m really upset that I still have to fight as hard as I do for reproductive justice and abortion access,” Strezo said. “We know that — in many cases — [CPCs’] intent is disingenuous, and they often will withhold critical information about pregnancy [and] about abortion. In my capacity as a city councilor, we have to make sure that … accurate information is getting out there.” Not only is the ordinance the first of its kind in Massachusetts,

Somerville City Hall is pictured on March 12, 2021.

NICOLE GARAY / THE TUFTS DAILY

but it is also unprecedented in Somerville. “[Somerville is] known for being trendsetters and really taking on issues that many municipalities sometimes are afraid of,” Strezo said. “I’m grateful to say this is another first for Somerville and Massachusetts.” Strezo said people have urged the protection of those seeking medical care for decades. “I feel a lot more comfortable knowing that our residents in Somerville and Tufts students have the correct medical information and won’t … have to deal with deceptive or misleading and manipulative language that crisis pregnancy centers are known to distribute,” Strezo said. The ban is proactive as Somerville is not home to any practices that fit into the CPC description. “While Somerville does not currently have any CPCs, in Massachusetts, these anti-abortion fake women’s health clinics outnumber legitimate reproductive care providers three to one,” Taylor St. Germain, communications director of see LEGISLATION, page 2

UberEats vouchers will be provided to students on meal plans who are asked to isolate in The Mods, a hotel or their residence halls. To seek medical care while in isolation, students can contact Health Service by calling 617-627-3350 or by scheduling a telehealth appointment in the health and wellness portal. The email emphasized that Tufts continues to require

indoor masking as part of its COVID-19 strategy. “As transmission of COVID within our student community remains high, we emphasize the need to wear a mask indoors while around others at all times,” the email read. “Mask wearing is essential in reducing the spread of COVID. We are concerned that continued high rates may impact the end of the academic year.”

Somerville to construct $2.5 million Poplar Street Pump Station by Olivia Field

Assistant News Editor

Congresswoman Ayanna Pressley announced last month that she had secured $8 million of federal funding for the Massachusetts 7th Congressional District, which she represents, and that $2.5 million of that funding will be allocated for a Somerville project called the Poplar Street Pump Station. The project is slated to begin construction in fall 2022 and will provide critical stormwater management infrastructure to the city. Somerville Ward 2 City Councilor J.T. Scott described the importance of the project. “The Poplar Street Pump Station itself is the linchpin to a citywide set of drainage management projects that will reduce flooding and the amount of sewage routinely discharged into the Mystic River from our existing ‘Combined Sewer Overflow’ system,” Scott wrote in an email to the Daily.

SPORTS / back

FEATS / page 3

ARTS / page 5

Baseball leads NESCAC after back-to-back wins against Bates

MSA programs support students observing Ramadan during the school year

Miley Cyrus reaches a new level with her newest, live album

In the 1980s, Massachusetts passed legislation that initiated the cleanup of the Boston Harbor, then considered the most heavily polluted waterway in the country. However, around 500 million gallons of wastewater are still deposited into the harbor via the Mystic and Charles Rivers every year, according to reporting by The Boston Globe. Rich Raiche, project executive and director of infrastructure and asset management for the City of Somerville, said the project is an extremely large undertaking but will provide significant benefits to Somerville residents, such as providing necessary flood relief and enhancing climate resilience. “The area has been prone to flooding for the past 100 or so years, and that flooding is getting worse and is projected to get worse,” Raiche said. “And so the pump station is being designed and the storage facility and the connection are being designed to be climate resilient against the changing climate.” see SEWERS, page 2 NEWS

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