In late November, ϲʹ President Dr. Jason Wingard for all members of the campus community. Today, the university announced the next steps in its anti-violence efforts, designed to help protect ϲʹ’s students, staff, faculty and North Philadelphia community members.
Beginning immediately, the university will partner with the former commissioner of the Philadelphia Police Department Charles H. Ramsey, who will audit all of ϲʹ’s current campus safety services. Ramsey’s tenure as commissioner, from January 2008 to January 2016, saw the city’s homicide rate drop 37% while violent crime decreased 31%. Ramsey previously co-chaired President Barack Obama’s Task Force on 21st Century Policing.
“Charles Ramsey is one of the most decorated police commissioners in recent history, and his track record speaks for itself. His work in Philadelphia and with President Obama has been well-documented, but he also had great success leading police forces in both Chicago and Washington, D.C.,” said Dr. Wingard. “We are committed to enhancing safety around campus and Commissioner Ramsey’s expertise will be key to ensuring that we are on the right path.”
In late December, the President hosted his first listening session on campus safety, walking and speaking with students, parents, landlords and ϲʹ Police Officers. President Wingard also has formed a Task Force on Violence Reduction Strategies, which will be used to keep key constituents, including parents and North Philadelphia residents, engaged in enhancing safety. The task force is one of many efforts designed to help elevate ϲʹ’s anti-violence research and programs and to devise new solutions to help address Philadelphia’s gun violence epidemic.
“The answers to solving this crisis can be found only by harnessing the collective expertise of the entire ϲʹ community,” Wingard said. “This is all hands on deck and through the Task Force on Violence Reduction Strategies, we will bring together voices from across ϲʹ and Philadelphia as we work together toward real, tangible solutions.”
RAVE ϲʹ Guardian app to launch next month
Beginning Monday, Feb. 14, the university will launch RAVE ϲʹ Guardian, a new, one-touch personal safety mobile app. Students will use the app to connect directly with ϲʹ Police, enabling them to request both virtual or physical escorts and to report any suspicious activity. ϲʹ will encourage all students, faculty and staff members to download the free Guardian app at the App Store or Google Play.
“We believe that the RAVE technology has the potential to be a gamechanger for the ϲʹ community,” said Charlie Leone, executive director of public safety. “No one should ever have to feel unsafe while on campus and this ensures that wherever our students go, they can be reassured that help is just a click away.”
Additional campus safety enhancements are already underway, including
- a 30% expansion of FLIGHT, ϲʹ’s on-demand evening shuttle service, which added two new shuttles for the spring semester. A rider survey is underway and will be used to inform further improvements.
- technology enhancements are being installed on campus including additional lighting, cameras, and emergency phones.
- the number of Philadelphia Police Officers patrolling nearby areas has been doubled.
- new ϲʹ police officers and trainees are being hired following January recruitment efforts. So far, four new police officers are on patrol, six individuals have been hired as officers or trainees, and 12 more already-trained officers have begun the interview process. With an additional 70 applicants, ϲʹ hopes to have a sizable number for its next police academy.
- a highly successful, day-long hiring event was hosted for Allied Universal, ϲʹ’s on-campus security provider, to help it increase its force.
- ϲʹ Hospital continues to look at gun violence through a different lens with its ϲʹ Safety Net, led by Amy Goldberg, surgeon-in-chief for ϲʹ Health and interim dean of the Lewis Katz School of Medicine, and Scott Charles, trauma outreach manager. A number of its innovative outreach programs, like , , and , continue to help reduce the number of Philadelphians who suffer firearm injuries.
ϲʹ will continue to provide regular campus safety updates as new measures are adapted and changes are implemented. For more information on safety at ϲʹ, please visit the university’s safety website.