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Can our campus cough squad force good sense on maskless students?

Unclear guidelines, screen-tanned conspiracy theorists and government party animals: none of them is helping campus security, says George Bass

Published on
December 22, 2021
Last updated
December 22, 2021
Boris Johnson putting on mask
Source: Getty (edited)

The senior facilities administrator faced聽me across the聽security counter, cradling boxes of聽disposable face coverings.

鈥淭hese are for you,鈥 he said. 鈥淵ou鈥檝e seen the staff notice about the new restrictions beginning tomorrow? We鈥檝e been advising students to聽bring their own masks, but at a聽pinch they can get one from you. We鈥檙e awaiting confirmation on聽how that will work.鈥

I scrolled through the security email inbox and read the new guidance on聽Covid. It聽seemed unclear. Face coverings were once again mandatory across the campus 鈥 except for people who were exempt. The exempted would be required to display an exemption lanyard 鈥 unless they didn鈥檛 feel comfortable doing聽so.

I asked the senior facilities administrator how a security guard like me should enforce a聽rule like that, which to all intents and purposes was still voluntary.

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鈥淲e鈥檙e awaiting confirmation,鈥 he said.

This was two weeks ago. I聽expect confirmation will soon be forthcoming given the increasing anxiety about the Omicron variant. Still, I聽can already foresee battles when trying to get people on campus to embrace mask-wearing again.

Guards have not stopped wearing our masks since the first wave. And, to be fair, lecturers have been pretty consistent in signing out transparent visors when teaching 鈥 as聽one explained to me, cloth masks are no聽use if there are any students who need to lip-read. If聽only academics could control their lateral flow test habits. Kits have been flying out of our window quicker than Harry Potter Lego from Santa鈥檚 workshop, and our ordering system can barely keep聽up.

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Another sign of anxiety about Omicron is students being sent to security by their lecturers to collect a mask before a lesson starts. Those lecturers are clearly made of sterner stuff than our librarians. On the morning the new rules kicked in, one guard got a phone call from a member of staff saying there were unmasked students in the silent study area, and that library administrators 鈥渨ere聽on too low a pay grade to face the anxiety of asking people to comply鈥. This to a bloke whose wage packet just about covers the weekly shop.

What can security do in such cases anyway? It would be easy for anyone in a large group to tell us they鈥檙e untouchable because they鈥檙e hosting a Conservative Students鈥 Association Christmas business meeting.

To be fair, though, most students are abiding by the new regulations. A recent headcount in the library revealed that 80聽per cent were complying with social distancing measures and wearing mouth coverings. This is just as well: during the last round of restrictions, we had Covid marshals to help us make sure everyone was behaving. This time, it鈥檚 just us.

That 80 per cent figure is all the more remarkable given that until recently masks had become a scarce sight on campus, despite still being recommended. So scarce, in fact, that security were using them as an early warning system that something was afoot.

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We adopted this mindset a聽few weeks ago, after being called to a disturbance in a first-floor seminar room. The tutor had reported a young bloke who had burst in, run across to the windows, and was now staring breathlessly through the blinds overlooking the main campus footpath. We calmed him down and checked his student聽ID. Although he wasn鈥檛 saying much, we later found out that there were three blokes prowling the campus looking for him. They were all in identical dark hoodies and wearing masks 鈥 not to stop the spread of the virus, but to keep their faces off CCTV. Whatever they wanted, it was serious enough to make our distressed student fork out for a cab to the nearest major railway station.

Another class of oddball we have to deal with are the campus conspiracy theorists, who鈥檝e been awake for too long and are getting a tan off their monitors. I鈥檝e lost count of how many contractors have tried to tell me the reason Omicron is so called is because the World Health Organisation skipped聽xi in the Greek alphabet to avoid upsetting the East Asian illuminati. We politely send such keyboard warriors packing; the last thing we want is to embolden them to brick the Happy Dragon takeaway.

Gen Z can be pretty Covid-clueless, too. One male resident of our halls of residence is on the recently revived self-isolation spreadsheet, obliging us to deliver food parcels to him. He also asks for his Amazon orders to be brought to his door. Yet he is regularly seen heading into town after dark and even brawling with people in club queues.

Whenever we鈥檙e told about his antics, we report them. And whenever we catch him in the act, we have a聽socially distanced word. But what we鈥檇 really welcome is the return of the cough squad: our nickname for the police car that used to patrol the city during previous waves to break up large groups and lock-ins. It would be a great deterrent now 鈥 although聽perhaps not in Westminster.

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At the other end of the germophobic scale, one student activated her emergency alert app at the start of the month to tell us she was self-isolating 鈥 until New Year鈥檚 Day. Perhaps, to be fair, she just really hates turkey 鈥 but if she does, she鈥檚 going to be distinctly impressed by her Christmas Day food delivery.

George Bass is a security guard at a UK university.

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POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline:聽Cough squad, we need cover!

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