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Campus Crime and Security Campus Fire Safety

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

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Campus Crime and Security Campus Fire Safety

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  1. Campus Crime and SecurityCampus Fire Safety 2012 Annual Reports

  2. 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

  3. 2012 Clery Crime Statistics Low rates Consistent trends

  4. 2012 Enforcement Categories Consistent patterns Minor changes in rates

  5. 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

  6. 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.

  7. Culture of SafetyCampus Involvement

  8. 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

  9. 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

  10. 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

  11. 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

  12. Questions

  13. Three Year Averages2012 – 2010

  14. Three Year Average

  15. 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

  16. Alcohol Violations as Percentage of Student Enrollment (working document)

  17. Alcohol Violations as Percentage of Dorm Capacity (working document)

  18. Alcohol Violations as Percentage of Dorm Capacity (working document)

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