Community spread of Covid-19 unassociated with travel to risk regions is almost definitely occurring in most American cities according to many reports. Tests not available to people experiencing symptoms in MN unless they name someone w/ a positive test of coronavirus, or they have extreme symptoms. Most people w/ the virus have no symptoms or mild symptoms, especially in the 1st week of infection, and so these people are infecting other people as I type by not changing habits. 2nd week is when SHTF it seems for infection. So... no one knows how many people actually have it in MN - probably way more than 3. Some experts say the US may have 16x more cases than the published figure because testing is so backed up. Earlier today, a thread on this subreddit claimed that UMN professors and students are known to be sick [presumably they don't qualify for testing].
Do you have confidence that the University of Minnesota would alert you, in the interests of your safety, if it knew of likely, but not test-confirmed, community-spread of Covid-19 on campus?
Your vote: Yes, I am confident the University of Minnesota would notify me, even if their were not confirmed tests, if administrators had reason to believe community spread was a threat to campus.