Drive-thru testing on Prescott Campus Sept 15, 22, and 29 from 9.a.m. to noon; testing on Verde Campus on September 15, 29 from 9 a.m. to noon
Yavapai Community College president Lisa Rhine has announced a Covid-19 testing program that will be available to its students, employees and their families. The drive-thru testing on the Prescott Campus will be from 9 a.m. to noon on September 15, 22 and 29. The testing site is on Parking lot “A” in front of the Performing Arts Center.
The drive-thru testing on the Verde Campus will be on September 15, 29 from 9 a.m. to noon. The testing site is on Parking lot #8, which is located on the backside of the campus near building “L.”
The tests will be conducted by Spectrum health. Students, faculty or their families are encouraged to pre-register online before driving to the testing site. This may reduce wait time for up to 10-15 minutes.
Spectrum Health says it will take most insurance and will work with those who do not have health insurance.
You may view Dr. Rhine’s announcement to the students, faculty and their families in the video below.

The recent edition of “Prescott Living Magazine” provides an in-depth interview of Yavapai Community College President Lisa Rhine. It should be a must read for anyone in Yavapai County interested in the leader of its Community College and the College’s future. 
Covid-19 will cause a loss of from $800,000 to $1 million dollars in revenue from the Yavapai Community College residence halls located on the Prescott Campus. One of the reasons for the loss is that there apparently will not be any athletes occupying the residence facilities in the fall. It is estimated that athletes take up about 60% of the residence hall space.
Yavapai Community College is trying out a new computer app that is designed to help it identify and trace persons in the college community who may have become infected with Covid-19. The idea is to encourage the Community College community to self-screen. The app is described as having the goal of creating “a culture of awareness and social responsibility. It also helps to scale the availability of care providers by reducing the volume of worried students and employees returning to campus.”
The Maricopa Community College Governing Board has decided to terminate the search for a new district chancellor, according to a story by Emily Wilder in the Arizona Republic of August 14, 2020. Officials told Ms. Wilder that the Board will meet to plan and establish criteria and committees for the new search in the coming weeks.
At a special meeting called for August 4, the Yavapai Community College District Governing Board unanimously approved a new plan for handling fall classes in the face of the Covid-19 pandemic. The new plan was needed because of liability coverage available to the College for Covid-19.
The District #4 seat, which is now occupied by Pat McCarver, will be filled in January by Chris Kuknyo. McCarver decided not to run after serving for more than a decade on the Board. Kuknyo is the only person to have completed the paperwork by the filing deadline for the position in that district.