From Dining Services to Residential Life, and Facilities to ITS, scores of dedicated people kept the College ticking throughout the pandemic
For the last 16 months, Krista Place has spent far too many of her working hours on hold. As Oxy’s student benefits and insurance specialist, Place works with insurers to make sure students get treatment for their medical and mental health needs. Under ordinary circumstances, that’s a relatively simple matter of dealing with local providers in Los Angeles and Pasadena.
But when the COVID-19 pandemic hit and 鶹Ƶwent remote last year, Place was suddenly dealing with students, insurers, and service providers scattered all over the world—and a huge increase in demand. “It just exploded,” says Place, who has worked in Oxy’s Emmons Wellness Center since 2015. “Everyone was having issues. A lot of people were utilizing benefits and a lot of insurance companies went remote. You’re waiting for calls to connect to the main line, and then for the calls to be rerouted to the people working at home. There was a lot of waiting.”As the pandemic moved classes, senior comps, and the rest of the academic experience online, hundreds of 鶹Ƶemployees worked quietly behind the scenes, both at home and on campus, to keep the College running. A sprint to provide essential services soon became a marathon—one that required staff to draw on a mix of creativity, flexibility, empathy, and sheer doggedness to continue to make critical support services available in the face of constantly changing circumstances.
“I am so very grateful for the dedication that the 鶹Ƶstaff members have shown, many of whom have been on the frontline of this pandemic,” says President Harry J. Elam, Jr., whose tenure at 鶹Ƶbegan on July 1 last year. “Living on campus, Michele and I have seen time and again the extraordinary efforts everyone has made to serve our students and faculty. And so we held a drop-in luncheon for all frontline staff—dining, facilities, campus safety—early in August at the Annenberg President’s House to celebrate and thank them for all they do and have done. Oxy’s sense of community is tangible and inspiring.”Place remembers days when, feeling overwhelmed and depressed, she didn’t want to come into work at Emmons. “Dealing with the stress of the pandemic on top of everything here was pretty difficult at times,” she says. “But it was nice having a team that knew what we were going through and made sure we took care of ourselves along with everyone else.”
Yet mingled with that strong sense of community and pride in the teamwork that pulled everyone through is an awareness of the toll the pandemic has taken. “It was a rough year, 2020,” says Michael Reyes, a member of the grounds crew in Facilities Management since 2017. “It wasn’t a good year for anybody.”
When 鶹Ƶswitched to remote learning in March 2020, every department on campus coped with its own set of challenges. Information Technology Services grappled with how to provide hardware and software support remotely. In the Registrar’s Office, staff was faced with how to communicate important changes in academic policy to students while trying to digitize essential forms. Dining Services had to downsize and reconfigure its services to meet public health guidance while redesigning menus to use up existing supplies. Residential Education and Housing Services (REHS) had to figure out how to identify and verify students with hardship cases who could remain in campus housing and how to give other students a way to retrieve their belongings from their residence hall rooms.
Regardless of the challenge, no one had lot of time to study new options or explore available alternatives. “It was kind of like, ‘Out with the old, but hang on to the old because you might need it, and in with the new and try to learn the new as fast as possible,’” says Michael Orta, an ITS technical support specialist since 2018. “It was a lot of research at home, figuring stuff out, being flexible, and being able to be pulled in different directions at a moment’s notice.”Speed was of the essence at a time when everything took longer. “The way I have always operated is if something comes up, just walk out to the front office and say, ‘Hey, this is what’s going on and we need to get this squared away.’ That wasn’t possible when I had folks working in five different places,” says Registrar Jim Herr ’86. “Online, we’re remotely connecting to a secure database and software that you might not have the necessary bandwidth for if you’ve got two kids in school fighting for internet access.”
For Joan Brewer, who had started as REHS office manager just before Thanksgiving, there hadn’t even been time to get fully up to speed on her new job before the pandemic hit. “There was so much I didn’t know, and I had to learn it virtually,” says Brewer, who previously worked as a receptionist in the Admission Office for 15 years. “Virtual meetings—I never had those before. Going to work meant going to work. So staying at home was hard.”As the pandemic continued to spread, keeping the College running became an exercise in patience and flexibility as guidance from public health officials changed regularly. “Every time a new set of guidelines came out, it was OK, what do we need to do to comply?” says Robert Starec, associate director of campus dining and a 28-year 鶹Ƶveteran.
Across campus, staff adopted an attitude of doing whatever it took to get the job done. When some of Dining Services’ suppliers of packaged snacks and bottled and canned beverages stopped carrying them because so few customers were buying, staff stepped up, Starec remembers: “There were times we were running to the store, to Smart & Final or Costco or wherever, to try and get some of our snack items or beverages.”Regular trips to the post office to get laptops, headsets, webcams, ethernet adapters, and other hardware to students and faculty became routine for ITS staff, which has long prided itself on its personal service. “We almost became like postal carriers,” Orta says.
Staff also stepped up when pandemic-generated budget deficits led to 129 colleagues—26 percent of the College’s non-faculty workforce—being temporarily furloughed. (All other employees had their salaries frozen and were required to take up to three weeks of unpaid furlough.) “Basically, I have two gears, and when the pandemic hit, I had to shift into second gear,” Reyes says. “There was more work and fewer people because of furloughs. Some days were better than others, you know.” For Reyes, in addition to picking up trash, that meant pulling weeds, trimming trees, mowing sports fields—"whatever needed to be done to make the campus look nice.”
The same was true for housekeeping staff, says Magdalena Cortes, whose 22 years at 鶹Ƶmean she cleans such key areas as the top floors of the Arthur G. Coons Administrative Center. Not only did furloughs mean being assigned additional buildings, but the deep cleaning demanded in the early days of the pandemic when the causes of transmission were not fully understood meant it took longer.Because of the continuing uncertainty, planning for the future required the repeated development of multiple scenarios. At one point during the summer of 2020, when the possibility loomed of bringing students back in the fall, REHS staff made a field trip to inspect apartments in Pasadena that could be leased to provide housing for students who couldn’t be accommodated on campus under the strict social distancing requirements then in place. “Many times we had to create as many as five different scenarios, fully planned out, knowing that we were probably only going to use one,” says Isaiah Thomas, assistant dean of students and REHS director. “But you need to be prepared.”
Teamwork was a key to weathering the pandemic, whether it was Student Affairs working with the Registrar’s Office to publicize changes in academic policies or ITS working with Student Leadership, Involvement & Community Engagement to put on a year’s worth of virtual events, including a Springfest concert last April featuring Grammy nominee Phoebe Bridgers. “We were trying to see how we could keep programming as normal as possible, and we were able to duplicate almost every event virtually,” says Shaneice Warfield, assistant director of student involvement.
“I was lucky because our front desk person in Emmons, Omar Mejorado, used to work in insurance in his old job, and there were days when the requests were just massive, and I’d ask Omar, can you take half the list, you start at the bottom, I’ll start at the top, and we’ll meet somewhere in the middle,” Place says. “And he would do it. He’s amazing.”
Staff members’ matter-of-fact recounting of their pandemic work experience, with an occasional laugh at the memory of particularly challenging situations, often masks the emotional upheaval they experienced in dealing with their own fears and worrying about their families and loved ones.
“The biggest challenge was just dealing with the uncertainty,” Starec says. “Whether they continued to work throughout or whether they were on furlough, staff was stressed and anxious. Everyone was wondering how is this going to progress, how is this going to affect us moving forward and when are we going to be able to return to work?”
Cortes remembers getting into her car to drive to campus to start her 4 a.m.-to-12:30 p.m. cleaning shift and starting to worry. “Before the pandemic, I was not worrying about anything,” she says in Spanish. “But everything you heard about on the news about people getting sick, just thinking about that was scary. I was afraid of getting sick and bringing it home to my family. Even though I was taking precautions for herself, I didn’t know whether other people were doing the same thing.”
Mike Redfern, a 14-year veteran of 鶹Ƶand ITS’ Mac user support specialist, also worried about getting others sick. He was diagnosed with what the doctors called bronchitis two weeks before the College shut down. COVID testing was not widely available at the time, so he worked remotely for the next four months unsure whether he had bronchitis or the virus. “It could have been COVID or it just could have been the stress I was under being sick and dealing with my Dad, who was on hospice with dementia,” he says. His father passed away during the first month of remote operations.In Dining Services, Starec was diagnosed with COVID last December, one of just 13 staff cases to emerge on campus. “About a week in, the symptoms got so severe, I had trouble breathing, so I went into the emergency room. But they said that as long as I have adequate oxygen levels, I just had to ride it out,” the ex-Marine remembers, laughing. He was back on the job in early January.
For weeks after he got off work, ITS’ Orta was dropping off groceries and supplies at his parents’ house, where his mother, father, brother, and sister-in-law were all suffering from COVID. “My Mom and my sister-in-law work in the medical field, and I believe they got it through that,” he says. “Mom and Dad had to go to the hospital. It was really tough. They were in there for a few days and then after they came out, I was trying to make sure that they all got fed, and just making sure they were OK.”
For Thomas and other 鶹Ƶemployees of color, including many REHS staff, the pandemic was not the only source of anguish. While he and his family remained healthy, “The murder of George Floyd was very significant to me because that’s home, and I know what it feels to be racially profiled by police in St. Paul and Minneapolis,” he says. “You have the challenges and isolation of COVID at the same time you have one of the biggest racial reckonings in this country, and there’s very little you can do about it—I can’t travel, I can’t go home, I can’t see family. That, for me, was the hardest thing to endure.”Cortes and her colleagues who were out on furlough—in her case, a 50 percent furlough, working one week and out the next—were coping with other sources of anxiety. Dealing with the California Employment Development Department was a nightmare, she says, with unemployment benefit checks arriving late or not at all. “One week I was calling all day, every day, trying to reach someone who could help me,” she says. “I didn’t know how I was going to pay my bills.”
Despite it all, Cortes and other 鶹Ƶstaff continued to show up for work. (All mandatory furloughs ended July 1, when Cortes returned to full-time work.) “I felt like I had to do my job to protect others,” Cortes says. “I had a social and a moral obligation to do my work and have everything clean.”
“It’s a testament to 鶹Ƶand the people who work here how much we were able to go through and still band together for the greater good,” Place says. “I don’t know if I’ve seen this any other place I’ve worked before.”