Published: Nov. 20, 2020

Takeaways

  1. Employees and researchers who are not already approved for on-campus or field workÌýwillÌýcontinue remote workÌýuntil instructed otherwise.ÌýÌýÌý
  2. Â鶹ӰԺ County’s shift to level red on the state COVID-19 dial does not directly impact approved research, scholarship and creative work activity at this time.ÌýÌýÌý
  3. Anyone performing work that has been approved should follow allÌýCU Â鶹ӰԺ,ÌýÌý²¹²Ô»åÌý.

Dear research community,

As you may know, the Colorado Department of Public Health and Environment has announced that several Colorado counties includingÌý, effective Friday, Nov. 20 at 5 p.m.ÌýCU Â鶹ӰԺ continues to monitor conditions and share updates on the campusÌýCOVID-19 Updates & Resources webpage.

The CU Â鶹ӰԺ research enterprise continues to operate in accordance with state, local and campus guidance, which means that our operations will not change significantly because of this announcement.Ìý

We continue to ask employees and researchers who are not already approved for on-campus or field work to continue remote work until instructed otherwise. Anyone performing work that has been approved should follow allÌýCU Â鶹ӰԺ,ÌýÌý²¹²Ô»åÌý. Research leaders across campus continue to carefully monitor densities in buildings and rooms to ensure compliance with capacity requirements.

In anticipation of potential changes in the dial status, the campusÌýÌýto address parameters for research activity under a stay-at-home order.ÌýNOTE: The Nov. 20 change DOES NOT include a stay-at-home order for Â鶹ӰԺ County at this time.ÌýFor possible future reference, that guidance is included here.

Critical researchÌýincludes research and creative work that must be done on campus in conjunction with the following criteria:

  1. Research that must be maintained for the health and safety of human subjects.
  2. Research for which discontinuation would generate data and sample loss that would be effectively irreplaceable.
  3. Maintenance of critical equipment and a safe standby mode of laboratories.
  4. MaintenanceÌýand continuity of useÌýof critical animal populationsÌýthat are hard to recreate and/or ethical conduct of research with animal subjects.
  5. Maintenance and care of plant populations that are hard to recreate and represent long term research.
  6. Research or creative work activities, in the field or other research/creative work spacesÌýthat:
    • could not be paused without causing significant setbacks,
    • could not be restarted without a significant investment of time or money,
    • will put grant or contract deliverables at risk or cause significant fiscal liability/loss,Ìý
    • represent time-sensitive and critical graduate student projectsÌýand career milestonesÌýrequired to ensure timely graduationÌýand career progressionÌýor,
    • have scheduled deliverables that can only be accomplished within campus spaces.
  7. Research supporting national security and critical infrastructure.
  8. COVID-19 research with a timeline relevant to the current pandemic.

As a reminder, anyone with Buff OneCard can participate in the COVID-19 surveillance monitoring program. This is a quick saliva-based test available to all CU affiliates. Information on testing sites is available online.

I continue to appreciate your flexibility, resilience and dedication during this time. Your continued commitment to excellence makes a difference for our students, colleagues and community and enables us to continue to shape a better future far beyond our campus. ÌýÌý

Stay well,

Terri Fiez signature
Terri Fiez
Vice Chancellor for Research & Innovation