Rappahannock Community College Health and Safety Statement
The health and safety of the RCC community are our top priorities. We will follow Virginia Department of Health and Centers for Disease Control guidelines. Students, faculty, and staff who have symptoms of infectious illness, such as influenza (flu), COVID-19, or an unexplained new rash should stay home and seek treatment from their healthcare provider, regardless of vaccination status. Staying home when sick is essential to keep infectious illness out of schools and to prevent spread to others.
FACULTY AND STAFF:
COVID-19 is one of the many illnesses that the College helps students and employees manage on a daily basis. The RCC emergency management team coordinates with Administration and HR, to respond if conditions require college operations to adapt.
HOW TO PROTECT YOURSELF:
- Monitor for symptoms of COVID-19.
- Do not attend work, class or gatherings if you are sick.
- Keep current on COVID-19 vaccinations and boosters. Visit vaccines.gov for local vaccination sites in the Commonwealth.
- Test if you suspect COVID-19. Find tests at retail pharmacies, or your medical provider.
- Maintain good hygiene, including handwashing and use of hand sanitizer.
- Wear a mask over the nose and mouth. Masking is always welcome anywhere at Rappahannock Community College Campuses and Sites and the last few years have clearly shown that masks dramatically reduce the spread of airborne infections, including COVID-19.
- Disinfect personal areas such as bathrooms, phones, keyboards, desks and offices frequently.
HOW TO RESPOND IF YOU TEST POSITIVE:
- The CDC calls for any COVID-19-positive person to avoid others while they are sick, returning to normal activity only after their symptoms have been improving for at least 24 hours and they are fever-free.
- Do not attend work or events at Rappahannock Community College while you are sick. Follow the RCC sick-time policies.
- When you do return to normal activities, the CDC recommends wearing a well-fitted mask for an additional five days, keeping additional distance from others and enhancing hygiene practices.
- Virginia no longer offers Public Health Emergency Leave (PHEL). If you are out from work because of a COVID-19 diagnosis, please use sick or other appropriate leave.
- If you feel able to work and your position allows you to work remotely, please coordinate with your supervisor, dean or chair as appropriate.
PLEASE CONTACT (Positive cases):
Mark W. Schmink
Campus Safety and Emergency Management Coordinator
Rappahannock Community College
12745 College Drive, Glenns, VA 23149
(804) 758-6719 ext. 436719
Room 140B
GUIDELINES FOR SUPERVISORS:
- RCC employees sick with COVID-19 or another respiratory illness should not attend work in person until their symptoms have been improving for at least 24 hours and they are fever-free. Please advise them to follow the college’s sick-time policies.
- Virginia no longer offers Public Health Emergency Leave (PHEL). If an employee is out because of a COVID-19 diagnosis, please advise them to use sick or other appropriate leave.
- If the employee feels able to work and their position allows them to work remotely, please coordinate the remote workload with them as appropriate.
GUIDELINES FOR FACULTY RESPONDING TO STUDENT ILLNESS – COVID-19
- RCC students who are sick with COVID-19 or another respiratory illness should not attend in-person classes until their symptoms have been improving for at least 24 hours and they are fever-free.
- Please accommodate students who need to miss class for a short period of time, as with any other illness. If you have a group of students who are out, consider recording lectures and/or using other means to provide instructional content.
- Please respect the medical privacy of students who have tested positive for COVID-19.
- The following guidelines may provide faculty with options for facilitating student access to academic activities while they are sick. These are intended as suggestions, not requirements:
- Lectures:If lectures for the course have been recorded in the past (even if taught by another instructor or with a slightly different syllabus), consider making them available on the course’s Canvas site as a resource to students with the caveat that they are a course tool and not the course itself. Ensure before doing so that permission has been obtained from the instructor (if different) and that the recording does not implicate the privacy interests of any student or other individual captured in the recording.
- Groups: If the course involves significant group work, encourage the absent student to engage with their group via Zoom, email or Google Docs in order to lessen disruption to assignments.
- Materials: Students can have access to current class materials, including slides, with class sessions recorded and shared using technology such as Canvas or even a cell phone recording. In some classes, students may be able to Zoom or FaceTime a classmate to be present.
- Notes: Identify a set of students attending class who are willing to share their notes and create a space on Canvas for them to do so. Students may also be willing to answer questions about the material via email or Zoom.
- Office Hours: Hold office hours remotely with absent students to address additional questions.
Students with positive cases of COVID should notify their respective Instructors immediately.