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UPDATE: Chancellor ‘confident’ with SUNY Fredonia in COVID-19 battle

Chancellor Jim Malatras, center, talks with College Council chair Frank Pagano, right, and State University of New York President Dr. Stephen Kolison.

State University of New York Chancellor Jim Malatras applauded the leadership of new President Dr. Stephen H. Kolison Jr. during a stop in Fredonia on Sunday afternoon.

Malatras met with Kolison, members of the SUNY Fredonia administration and College Council to discuss the growing concerns of COVID-19 on a number of state campuses. Last week, SUNY Fredonia suspended 13 students for violating the Student Code of Conduct relating to COVID-19 and off-campus gatherings.

“I feel very confident in what the president is doing here as we reopen,” Malatras said in a meeting with the news media in Fenton Hall. “I think there should be great confidence … not only to the students, but to the parents and to the faculty and staff who work here and to the broader community.”

Through Sunday morning, the SUNY Fredonia dashboard noted 64 cases of COVID-19 with 63 active. Over the past week, cases have increased from two to the current number.

Before stopping at Fredonia, the chancellor was in Buffalo meeting with SUNY leaders there to announce that the Western New York group of campuses will increase their frequency of required pooled surveillance testing for COVID-19 in response to a recent case surge. Malatras reaffirmed the necessity for full COVID-19 safety compliance by students and the entire college community and stressed the need for close monitoring and strict enforcement to limit the spread of COVID-19. The vast majority of students across SUNY, he said, are complying with safety protocols.

Malatras also launched a SUNY systemwide COVID-19 case tracker dashboard, which was announced by Gov. Andrew Cuomo. The centralized dashboard will provide real time, up-to-date information on COVID-19 cases, testing, and quarantine and isolation space availability across SUNY’s 64 colleges and universities to more efficiently monitor, respond to, and contain the virus.

“When we see COVID-19 surges on particular campuses, we need to increase the frequency of testing to truly understand the full scope of the virus and to respond decisively and in a way that protects students, faculty, staff, and the surrounding community,” he said. “I want to thank President Kolison for partnering with my office to increase testing, acting with urgency, and continuing to send strong messages to students about the importance of following safety precautions.”

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