Connor Sheets Profile picture
Aug 31, 2020 14 tweets 6 min read Read on X
University of Alabama senior Carlee Fernandez works the front desk of a tower UA converted last week to quarantine COVID-positive/exposed students amid an explosion in student cases. She says UA provided no guidance about how to handle sick students. 1/X al.com/news/2020/08/t…
“The students are coming in. A few of them came up to the front desk just with their masks on and their stuff in their hands and were like, ‘I’m here to move into isolation. What do I do?’” Fernandez said. “We were never told what to do if someone comes for isolation." 2/X Image
Meanwhile, UA is seeing one of the nation's most severe campus coronavirus breakouts. The university added 481 new student COVID-19 cases in 3 days last week and it reported Friday that 36% of its isolation space in Tuscaloosa was occupied. 3/X
Instead of training, Fernandez was given a one-page FAQ sheet to refer to when students ask about the dorm's COVID conversion. But even that seems unsafe, she says, as the front desk's Plexiglas barriers don't cover the area where those face-to-face conversations take place. 4/X Image
UA spokeswoman Monica Watts said in a statement emailed to AL.com that safety is the school’s “top priority." 5/X Image
Morgan Quillin was only 6 days into her freshman year at UA when she received an email from the university last week stating she had two days to move out of her dorm in Burke West, a tower the university converted to isolation space in response to rising COVID cases 6/X Image
“A lot of things were up in the air. I had a panic attack while my roommate was frantically packing and trying to console me,” Quillin told AL.com. “I was devastated and so incredibly scared. I felt abandoned by the school I’ve looked up to my whole life.” 7/X Image
She was assigned a new roommate in a different tower, which Quillin said made her worried about possible COVID exposure. She was eventually able to move to a new dorm w/ her original roommate. The experience left her concerned about the school's dedication to student safety. 8/X Image
UA sophomore Lila Bogle was in a cavernous lecture hall w/ dozens of other students last week when a student behind her sneezed. When Bogle turned around to say bless you, the student’s mask was not on her face. The student said she had only pulled it down to sneeze. 9/X Image
Bogle said the incident reflects her wider concern that "a lot of people aren’t taking [COVID precautions] very seriously. There is some partying and going out still, just based on hearing girls arrive back at their rooms on weekends and sounding drunk when they get back." 10/X
Most of the over a dozen students and faculty who spoke with AL.com for this story said they don't believe there is anything UA can do to sufficiently slow the rise in COVID-19 cases among UA students. 11/X Image
The question on all of their minds: Will UA be left with no option but to cancel in-person classes in response to the raging COVID-19 outbreak? Morgan Quillin would like to see the university take that step. 12/X Image
But Monica Watts, the UA spokeswoman, says the university bullish that it will be able to "bend the curve" on coronavirus. 13/X Image
Students' fall semester bills are due Sept. 4 and the first UA football game is scheduled for Sept. 26. Whether students will still be on campus by those dates remains to be seen. Thanks for reading, more detail in the full story. 14/14
al.com/news/2020/08/t…

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More from @ConnorASheets

Mar 26, 2022
Citing a “long history of serious deficiencies,” ICE has announced it will not longer house immigration detainees in the Etowah County jail al.com/news/2022/03/i…
This announcement comes six years after ICE toured the Alabama facility and issued a report detailing numerous failings including safety concerns and subpar food and health care. ice.gov/doclib/foia/od…
ICE’s announcement also comes four years after I reported that Etowah County’s former sheriff pocketed more than $1.5 million of federal money that was allocated to feed ICE detainees. al.com/news/2018/12/h…
Read 4 tweets
Aug 28, 2021
Creeping on Charles Barkley at a COVID vaccination drive at Birmingham’s Legion Field just now. Story tk later today on @aldotcom.
Here’s more about the event if you’d like to come out and get the shot and meet Charles Barkley this afternoon. He’s been a prominent advocate for vaccination in Alabama and beyond.
Kabria Rembert, 20, said she got the vaccination here today because: “I’m young and I don’t have any underlying conditions, but I’ve got to take care of the people around me. I’m just trying not to be selfish.”
Read 6 tweets
Aug 27, 2021
With mobile morgues in place in Mobile Co., AL’s health officer said today “there’s no room to put these bodies.” In March 2020, I wrote about AL’s mass-casualty plans. They include mass burials & cremations and temporary internments. A terrifying prospect al.com/news/2020/03/w… ImageImageImage
Worth noting: These plans are still up on the AL Dept of Public Health website. And the ADPH’s general counsel told me last March “Alabama will continue to follow its disaster and pandemic planning documents, according each individual respect and dignity.” alabamapublichealth.gov/pandemicflu/as…
Here’s the slide deck for a 2009 presentation state health officer Scott Harris led to educate coroners on what their roles would be if there were to be a high-casualty pandemic. One slide is titled “Mass burial planning.” It’s still up on ADPH’s website. alabamapublichealth.gov/CEP/assets/Fat… ImageImageImage
Read 6 tweets
Aug 18, 2021
Tonight, Alabama has zero open ICU beds. Worth remembering that until last March, AL had a discriminatory protocol in place advising hospitals low on ventilators to take patients w/ certain diagnoses & disabilities off vents to free them up for others. 1/7 al.com/news/2020/03/l…
The protocol stated that during a worst-case scenario pandemic, Alabama hospitals should “not offer mechanical ventilator support for patients” w/ any of a long list of medical issues and intellectual disabilities. 2/7
Four days after I reported on the existence of the protocol, which the state health department later said was only a suggestion, the U.S. Dept of Health & Human Service’s Civil Rights Office issued a bulletin warning states against discriminatory ventilator triage practices. 3/7
Read 7 tweets
Aug 18, 2021
Random Alabama factoid that still blows my mind 3 years after I found out about it: The municipal laws for municipalities in 18 counties are not available on any state website and the state does not have them in any digital format. 1/3
I was told this is because the state's contract to have them digitized ran out after Mobile County. The laws - *which are part of the state code* - were being digitized county by county in alphabetical order. So Mobile County is online, but Monroe, Montgomery, etc. are not. 2/3
When I needed to look through them for a story, there was no official way to access the text of all the municipal laws in the state w/o physically going to each county. I eventually tracked down a paper copy of the full state code at the 3rd law school I called. Good times. 3/3
Read 4 tweets
Jan 25, 2021
Update on my March reporting for @propublica & @aldotcom: In multiple Alabama counties, ppl w/ >2 felony convictions are still being charged w/ failing to register as repeat felons & failing to present "felon ID" to police, crimes punishable by up to a year in jail & fines. 1/6
Alabama is the only state w/ state laws requiring 3-time felons to register & carry "felon ID," which even most lawyers & felons have never heard of. Ppl do end up serving real jail time for violating the laws, which are only enforced in some counties. 2/6 propublica.org/article/a-litt…
As a result of my reporting on this arbitrary regime, some Alabama sheriffs said they'd only enforce the laws in tandem w/ other charges. But ppl are still being punished for violating them alone. And the tally mounts, w/ hundreds of people arrested on the charges since 2014. 3/6
Read 6 tweets

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