Since the return of UK students to universities in September, it seems that campus security has hit headlines for all the wrong reasons.
First, it was being told to听 at a University of Manchester hall of residence and carry out ID checks at entry points. Understandably, this led to protests from students 鈥 one of whom likened the situation to Alcatraz 鈥 that culminated in wire mesh fencing being toppled.
A month earlier, students at Manchester Metropolitan University were similarly unimpressed when told to self-isolate with immediate effect. One student claimed the university听seemed to be holding students .
Then there was the incident in which an undergraduate was pinned against a wall by security staff, allegedly for听.
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I can鈥檛 explain or justify the above, but I will say we鈥檙e all working in fraught times. Before each shift, our supervisor forwards the list of student flats where undergrads have declared that they are self-isolating. We call it the minefield because we鈥檙e still required to enter should there be an out-of-hours maintenance emergency 鈥 such as a blocked toilet that pours water through the kitchen ceiling.
Regular security duties have taken a slight back step, with priority going to getting quarantined freshers their Amazon orders and placating parents whose self-isolating son or daughter hasn鈥檛 checked in on Facebook that day (we don apron and visor and enter the minefield to ensure the student in question is OK).
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So why haven鈥檛 universities succeeded in 鈥溾, as the education secretary, Gavin Williamson, assured the House of Commons in September that they would?
It would be easy to pin the blame on the students 鈥 I鈥檝e certainly seen them do some daft things in my 10-plus years on the job. Take the fresher heckling drivers from his first-floor window who hadn鈥檛 counted on one of them being a very nimble scaffolder. Or the drunk lad who rolled his ankle and got a piggy-back home, only for his other ankle 鈥 and a coffee table 鈥 to be smashed up when his even more hammered partner dropped him when they got back to their flat.
So I can understand why the government announced its proposed听听to get students home before Christmas. The in England is to shift all teaching online by 3 December, then screen every student for coronavirus听at a nearby test centre. Provided they come back negative, they鈥檒l be given a specific window before 9 December to travel.
But I鈥檓 really not sure how it鈥檚 going to work. If Boris Johnson, the most powerful and protected man in the country, can contract Covid-19 twice, what hope is there for a teenager who almost burned down his kitchen trying to dry bedsheets on a gas hob?
Until they are given their allotted departure time, no one is meant to travel home, but that is a challenge for us guards. Do we dive on anyone pulling a suitcase and accuse them of jumping the wall? Dispersing skateboarders and听stray smackheads is one thing; forcing people back indoors is a little bit too secret police for my liking.
Some students have already faced discipline, such as the girl who grassed on the bloke opposite her in halls for sneaking in his boyfriend. This breach of Covid protocols wasn鈥檛 a shock to us; we can鈥檛 cover every part of the campus fence, and if I was 19 and paying 拢9,250 for a bedroom, I鈥檇 certainly be making the most of my bed, too.
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But we were surprised to find the girl had only made the complaint because she鈥檇 snuck in two friends of her own. She decided to report the boys when they refused to go five ways on a curry.
There鈥檚 an argument that students should never have come back to campus this year. But I can see the value of face-to-face learning when I patrol our medical block. Imagine if all the doctors staffing those makeshift Nightingale hospitals had done all their learning via Zoom. Would the quality of care be anything like as good as it is?
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Still, for students on other courses 鈥 such as the two freshers we encountered suffering panic attacks this week 鈥 maybe virtual study would suit them more. Though then we wouldn鈥檛 have been able to buy one of them a very un-virtual pizza to calm down with.
I鈥檝e heard academics blame MPs for allowing students back, and even causing the second wave. I鈥檓 not sure it鈥檚 as simple as that, either, but if any politicians are reading this, I鈥檝e got an idea for how you can make social distancing on campus more feasible.
Pay Apple to install a patch in its next software update that makes your phone search for other nearby handsets. Any device that gets within two metres of one from a different address sounds a klaxon, and then begins to eat its own hard disk. No student would risk such an existential crisis.
If that鈥檚 too brutal, the patch could instead post everything to Instagram: memes, selfies, texts to Mum. Keep your distance and stay safe or your followers will see everything 鈥 and that includes those photos buried in your secret calculator app.
Then again, I鈥檓 not sure how we鈥檇 afford all the anti-trauma pizzas that we鈥檇 need to provide.
George Bass is a security guard at a UK university.听
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