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As COVID-19 continues to spread in Dane County, some UW-Madison students have fostered and adopted dogs in order to cope with living in a time of social distancing.
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As COVID-19 continues to spread in Dane County, some UW-Madison students have fostered and adopted dogs in order to cope with living in a time of social distancing.
I see you. I see you celebrating the triumphant return of Badger football, reposting BadgerBarstool’s instagram post on your story to show all 700 of your followers how much this means to you. You see the headline, “The Big Ten is BACK!” and can’t help but rejoice and crack a warm Hamm’s during your online lecture.
When the Big Ten announced a postponement of fall sports on Aug. 11, it was hard to muster any kind of optimism for the prospects of a 2020 football season. But, seemingly against all odds, the conference announced today that a season will be played after all, with kickoff taking place on October 23 and 24.
Gov. Tony Evers and Wisconsin Department of Health Services Secretary-designee Andrea Palm addressed the increasing COVID-19 cases on college campuses in a media briefing Tuesday.
Chancellor Rebecca Blank stands by UW-Madison’s decision to start with in-person instruction for the Fall 2020 semester, despite the recent rise in cases.
Several Madison-area private schools are making plans to open for in-person learning this week following a Wisconsin Supreme Court decision on Thursday that overturned Dane County’s order for classes to remain online.
The Dane County COVID-19 Dashboard indicates an exponential rise in cases following the "smart" reopening of campus.
As we have all experienced over these six months, the COVID-19 crisis has upended normalcy. From remote working to virtual learning, the loss of healthcare to the loss of loved ones, the coronavirus has forced us all to operate under a new, frightening reality. At the same time, it has brought into crisp focus our society’s greatest inequities and our leaders’ misplaced priorities.
The Wisconsin Supreme Court ruled 4-3 Thursday that municipal clerks should pause their mailing of absentee ballots until a ruling is made on the Green Party’s bid to be on the ballot.
As of Wednesday night, 22 affiliated and four unaffiliated university Greek chapter facilities have been issued quarantine orders by Public Health Madison & Dane County in coordination with UW-Madison. The Office of Student Conduct and Community has been emailing letters to inform live-in members of the quarantine directive.
UW-Madison Chancellor Rebecca Blank has elected not to heed requests from Dane County elected officials, instead opting to move to completely remote instruction from Sept. 10 to the 25.
UW-Madison has begun to integrate surveillance testing into its Smart Restart plan following a recent spike in positive COVID-19 cases among the university population.
As COVID-19 cases rise in Dane County, several bars in the downtown Madison area have shortened their hours or shut down entirely to prevent transmission among patrons and employees.
Go to this link (myvote.wi.gov, My Voter Info) and fill in your name and date of birth. Then click on the search button. If you are registered, your name and address will come up. Make sure that your address is correct! If not, follow the steps under the button “Update Address.” This may require you to mail in an application if you do not have a Wisconsin ID, so make sure you get this done well in advance. Also, you can email voting@cityofmadison.com and someone will help you change your address online.
On Sept. 5, Dane County clocked in at 147 positive COVID-19 cases, beating out its previous record for the highest number of cases in a single day of 141 back in June. As Public Health Madison & Dane County scrambled, calling for restricted travel around the Labor Day weekend, more and more positive results were reported among smaller numbers of conducted tests.
Effective at 5 p.m. Monday, UW-Madison Chancellor Rebecca Blank directed all undergraduate students to “severely limit in-person interaction and restrict their movement” for two weeks following a rise in COVID-19 cases.
Public Health Madison and Dane County directed 420 UW-Madison students from nine Greek life chapters to quarantine themselves, the university announced Friday.
March 23 — UW-Madison suspends face-to-face instruction.
Election officials offered mail-in voting guidance as legislators express concerns over USPS changes and rejected ballots. The City Clerk’s Office described how they are adjusting to new voting norms.
Evers announced the decision as two more cases were confirmed in Dane County, bringing Wisconsin’s total confirmed cases to eight.