Politics & Government

UArizona, Pima College Will Follow Ducey's COVID-19 Order

UArizona and Pima College will comply with Gov. Doug Ducey's executive order barring public schools from requiring COVID-19 vaccinations.

TUCSON, AZ — The University of Arizona will follow Arizona Gov. Doug Ducey's executive order that bars public universities and colleges from mandating COVID-19 vaccinations to attend in-person classes.

Ducey said the order is meant to preserve the public's right to learn in-person, after a year in which education was uprooted by the COVID-19 pandemic.

"The vaccine works, and we encourage Arizonans to take it. But it is a choice and we need to keep it that way,” said Ducey in a statement. “Public education is a public right, and taxpayers are paying for it. We need to make our public universities available for students to return to learning. They have already missed out on too much learning. From K-12 to higher education, Arizona is supporting in-person learning.”

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The University of Arizona’s official statement on Ducey's order reads:

“We will comply with the Governor’s executive order and continue to monitor our public health conditions to help ensure the health and well-being of our students, faculty and staff.”

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The order came after Arizona State University's announcement that in-person classes would return in the fall with the expectation that all students would be vaccinated.

Arizona Rep. T.J. Shope released a screenshot on Twitter of the university's COVID-19 policies, which states that unvaccinated students that don't share their vaccination status with the university must submit to daily health checks, twice-weekly COVID-19 testing and must wear face coverings in all indoor and outdoor spaces on ASU's campus.

The document, which was sent to ASU students and parents from Dr. Joanne Vogel, who is the university's vice president of student services, lays out early on that its policy is to encourage students to get a vaccine, while not requiring them to do so.

"As we continue preparations for fall 2021, we are writing to remind you of the university's expectation that all students enrolled in an on-campus academic program for 2021-22 will be vaccinated," the letter reads.

In his tweet on Tuesday morning, Shope criticized ASU for its policy, saying it was nonsensical.

In a Twitter thread Tuesday, Ducey criticized the university for mandating vaccines and masks and not respecting students right to receive an education.

Pima Community College Executive Director of Media, Community & Government Relations Libby Howell made the following statement on the order:

"Pima Community College will of course abide by the Governor's Executive Order. Following the guidance of the Centers for Disease Control and the Pima County Health Department, the College will continue to strongly encourage employees and students alike to get their Covid-19 vaccinations and to wear masks as appropriate. Throughout the pandemic, the health and safety of the Pima family has been our paramount concern and will continue to remain a top priority."

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