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Lowell Covid Patrol use’s social media to keep a vigilant eye out for social distance violations

(Photo courtesy of the United Nations Covid-19 Response Creative Content Hub)

Cassandra Milnes
Connector Editor 

On September 7, 2020, multiple UMass Lowell students noticed a sudden follow request on Instagram from a private account called @lowellcovidpatrol with no name in the profile.

“Giving the cold hard facts on people being inconsiderate and partying during a global pandemic in good ol’ Lowell,” says the account’s bio. “Send us an anonymous DM.” The first post is an image stating “COVID @ LOWELL” with a caption similar to their bio.

After being accepted to follow this account, the Connector sent a message to the account requesting an interview through direct messages. The account responded quickly and enthusiastically said agreed to be interviewed. At first, they were worried about remaining anonymous and said that they did not want to disclose certain information.

After certain information would be used to verify that the account was not a scam or bot, the account said that all messages may be shared and began answering previous and following questions. The account says it is run by a group of people in the Lowell area, and would not say on whether they are students. They said that they are looking for parties in all areas of Lowell, but anticipate learning about the most parties being run by UML students.

The account was created after members of the group saw posts on Snapchat and wanted to make people aware of the issue of people partying during quarantine. On September 7, 2020, the account had not yet received any evidence of parties in Lowell. On September 8, at nearly midnight, they received their first message stating that there was an off-campus party with on-campus residents in attendance.

The account has no connection to other accounts claiming to look for evidence of parties in Lowell and at UMass Lowell, such as @covid_19uml, which currently has no profile picture, profile name, bio or posts.

The account said that their goal is to “bring awareness that there are social gatherings happening to those who should be looking deeper into controlling the coronavirus pandemic so there are not outbreaks.” They are not aiming to get any specific people in trouble, but instead, want to bring awareness to what is occurring in the area.

The account will not be sharing any information that is sent to them. This includes the identity of the sender, the identity of those in the images and the images themselves. They said that the only time they would share any information is if it became requested by authorities, which it currently is not.

In Massachusetts, COVID cases have increased by 229 within the past two days. Out of these 229 cases, 40 of them were in Middlesex County, which is the county that Lowell is located in. In total, there have been 123,000 cases of COVID in Massachusetts, with 25,752 cases being in Middlesex County. In Lowell, there has been a total of 3,196 confirmed cases with an average of 4-8 new cases per day over the last fourteen days.

Each city or town in Massachusetts is given a color to code their average daily case rate, with white being less than five reported cases in total, green being less than four cases per 100,000 citizens, yellow being four to eight cases per 100,000, and red being over eight cases per 100,000 citizens. As such, Lowell is classified as a yellow city, which is considered at moderate risk.

The case numbers in Lowell are from before students moved into residence halls on August 24 (with the exception of early move-in dates from August 17 to 21). The first case in Lowell was in mid-March, soon before students left campus for spring break. They only returned back to campus to retrieve their belongings, as they were instructed to move out after cases had spiked in the country. Therefore, most cases in Lowell cannot be blamed on UMass Lowell.

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One Comment;

  1. J Richard said:

    So you are for non students, basically vigilantes, tracking UMass students. Interesting the Connector isn’t protecting the student body from outside unknown influences. Even worse that your Editor is all for anonymous outside control of student behavior. Sorry, but I was a UMass Amherst student and the Minuteman would never have given up the independence of the students to unknown what was it again that you didn’t find out?

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