McPhee encourages vaccinations in MTSU's Fall Faculty Meeting

Aug 20, 2021 at 08:25 am by Voice Wire


As thousands of Middle Tennessee State University students continue moving back onto campus this week, President Sidney A. McPhee welcomed back faculty and staff with praise for their resilience the past 18 months of the pandemic while emphasizing vigilance as the campus returns to more traditional operations for the fall semester.

Signs of that vigilance were unmistakable inside the university’s Tucker Theatre on Thursday for the traditional Fall Faculty Meeting, with all attendees complying with McPhee’s recently reinstated mask mandate indoors and applauding his commitment to follow the guidance from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and state and local health official on how best to deal with the coronavirus.

As usual, the majority of McPhee’s address was filled with encouragement for the campus community, as he spotlighted several new degree programs and initiatives, notable grant awards for faculty research, national program rankings, new construction and proposed upgrades to campus facilities, and recent and pending bonuses for employees.

But with last year’s Fall Faculty meeting forced to a virtual-only format due to COVID-19 and the recent emergence of the delta variant throughout the community and nation raising concerns, McPhee encouraged the in-person and livestreamed audience to take advantage of the free vaccines available on campus and elsewhere in the community.

“We are aware of multiple perspectives, sensitivities, and questions about the resumption of on-campus activities this fall and also that so many of us have been yearning for a return to normal, in-person activities,” he said. “However, as the primary responsibility for protecting our health — in regards to the COVID-19 pandemic while on campus — shifts from the institution to the individual, it is our view that the single best step you can take to protect yourself from the coronavirus and its variants is to get vaccinated.”

Other highlights from McPhee’s speech:

“We must accept the fact that this virus will be around for some time and it is in our best interest to learn how to live with it as we move forward with the resumption our daily lives,” McPhee said.

“We have and are continuing to experience a worldwide pandemic, so I fully understand the heightened level of anxiety that comes along with working through such major challenges and so many unknowns. I can promise you, however, that the health and safety of every member of our campus community has been and will continue to be at the very top of my priorities.

MTSU will welcome incoming freshmen and transfer students during University Convocation set for 6 p.m. Saturday, Aug. 21, in Murphy Center featuring military veteran and author Wes Moore followed by a President’s Welcome Bash at Floyd Stadium. MTSU’s fall semester officially begins Monday, Aug. 23.

Tags: Coronavirus Covid-19 Middle Tennessee State University (MTSU)
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