200 likes | 229 Views
Campus Crime and Security Campus Fire Safety. 2012 Annual Reports. Annual Security Report An institutional responsibility. P rescribed by federal regulation Inclusive process - OGC, UPD, ODOS, EH&S, HRL, IRM, Audit, OUR…. Institutional policies
E N D
Campus Crime and SecurityCampus Fire Safety 2012 Annual Reports
Annual Security ReportAn institutional responsibility • Prescribed by federal regulation • Inclusive process - OGC, UPD, ODOS, EH&S, HRL, IRM, Audit, OUR…. • Institutional policies • Crime statistics for calendar years 2012, 2011, and 2010 • Posted to UPD website • Notice distributed to current & prospective students & employees • Statistics submitted to the U.S. Department of Education
2012 Clery Crime Statistics Low rates Consistent trends
2012 Enforcement Categories Consistent patterns Minor changes in rates
UNCW Campus Fire Safety Report • Prepared by Environmental Health & Safety • Applies to residence halls • Requires reporting of building construction, fire protection systems, drills, regulations and training, improvements as well as actual fires • Major accomplishments: • Revised Health & Safety Inspection protocols to ensure uniformity and cover highest risks • Targeted cooking education programs • Increased fire safety education significantly in residence halls http://uncw.edu/ehs/documents/AnnualFireSafetyReport.pdf
2012/2013 Fire Safety Log • The report includes a log of all reportable fires in on campus housing • Fire – any event that results in injury, death, or property damage or any flame that is outside its intended container • There was one reportable fire at UNCW – Seahawk Landing Building 6 - short circuit in a dryer, due to lint accumulation • Primary source of nuisance alarms is cooking, particularly instant macaroni and cheese and breakfast meats • Secondary source of nuisance alarms are personal grooming such as blow dryers and hairspray.
Culture of SafetyEnvironmental Design • 150+ Emergency Call Boxes and Telephones • Intercoms in many campus buildings and rooms • Fire alarms in all major campus buildings • Sprinklers in all residential buildings • Traditional residence halls are locked 24/7 • UNCW Alert – a layered system that includes sirens, text messages, and alert beacons and web postings • Lighting and Landscaping - designed and maintained with an eye towards security • Annual safety walk – community participation • Security cameras for investigative purposes
Culture of SafetyStaffing & Intervention • CROSSROADS: Substance Abuse Prevention & Education • HRL Staff available 24/7 (RAs, RCs, ARCs) • Broad involvement & collaboration w/ local emergency responders • Emergency Planning Group • 24 hour desk receptionists in residence halls • Counseling Center • CARE – Collaboration for Assault Response and Education • EH&S, Emergency Management • Office of Facilities • Institutional Risk Management
Culture of SafetyAwareness and Education • Freshman & Parent Orientation – Safety Presentations • Floor meetings in the residence halls • New Employee Orientation • UNI 101 Classes • Fire Exit Drills • Health & Safety Inspections • Personal Safety, self-defense, and workplace safety training seminars • Defensive Driving Courses • A myriad of other topics
Strategies • Best practices • Monitor offense rates and trends of offending • Engage our colleagues across the state and nation • Sustain programs with proven results: • Campus Judicial System • Education and awareness • Campus partnerships • Community policing • Early intervention
Rates & Regulations Enrollment & Housing: 2012 – 13,733 / 4,135; 2011 – 13,145 / 4,259; 2010 – 13,071 / 4,239; 2009 Fall Enrollment 2013 – 13,937 2012 – 13,733 2011 – 13,145 2010 – 13,071 2009 – 12,924 *Notes: Violent crimes includes murder, non-negligent homicide, robbery, aggravated assault, sex offenses Property crimes includes arson, burglary, and motor vehicle theft Student rate is the number of violations as a percentage of the total student enrollment Housing rate is the number of violations as a percentage of the total number of students living on campus. Rates are calculated using Fall enrollment/housing values from prior year, ex. Calendar year 2013 crime against fall 2012 enrollment. Report for Calendar Year 2013 will include new information: statistics and policies surrounding domestic violence, relationship violence, and stalking and additional categories of hate crimes. U.S. Department of Education has not released final reporting criteria. Fall Housing 2013 – 4,135 2012 – 4,135 2011 – 4,259 2010 – 4,231 2009 – 4,058
Alcohol Violations as Percentage of Student Enrollment (working document)
Alcohol Violations as Percentage of Dorm Capacity (working document)
Alcohol Violations as Percentage of Dorm Capacity (working document)