Knowing It All
        College employs rapid alert service to keep students, faculty and staff in the know
        
        
			- By Karina Sanchez
- Sep 05, 2007
				THE carefree days of college
  are not far from
  most peoples’ minds. But
  in college, security was
  hardly an issue. In fact, many oncampus
  residents didn’t think twice
  about leaving their doors unlocked
  while in class or at work. And
  though the security culture has
  recently changed on college campuses,
  it seems as though students’
  perception has not.
  
“Students here are not concerned
  with security,” said Aaron
  Fetrow, dean for campus life for
  Guilford College.  
While students almost unknowingly
  enjoy the comforts of a secure
  campus, Guilford College is hard at
  work in keeping security top-of-mind. The school is situated in
  Greensboro, N.C. The Quaker-founded college opened in 1837 as New
  Garden Boarding School and transformed itself into a four-year liberal
  arts college in 1888. Today, it is the fourth-oldest degree-granting institution
  in North Carolina and one of the few campuses in the nation listed
  by the Department of the Interior as a National Historic District.
  Though the campus spans an impressive 125 acres, the college also
  owns 225 acres of woodlands, some of which aren’t fenced in.  
“We don’t discourage the public from using the trails in the wooded
  areas, but with that comes worries with drug trafficking and security
  issues,” Fetrow said. “We work with the Greensboro Police Department
  on establishing patrols of the woods, and we recently added a fourwheel-
  drive golf cart to help in patrolling those areas.  
“Another focus for our public safety department is community policing—
  more foot patrols, more interaction with faculty, staff and students.”  
Security Afoot
 
  The need for a closer interaction with students, faculty and staff also led
  the college to install a rapid communications service. To that effort, the
  school employed Safe-T-Net’s AlertNow. AlertNow is a Web-based
  application service provider that enables schools to deliver thousands of
  voice or text messages, in up to 11 different languages, to telephones,
  mobile phones, PDAs or any Internet-enabled device.
Fetrow simply logs in to the AlertNow Web site, picks up the phone
  and dials in, records his voice alert and selects which recipients the
  message is intended for. Within minutes, those recipients receive a call
  or text message. But, Fetrow admits, after buying into the service in
  2004, the college didn’t use it for a year.
“AlertNow called us and said, ‘you’re paying for this list, at least put
  some people in it,’” Fetrow said.
And that’s what prompted the college to garner emergency contact
  numbers from those willing to volunteer the information. Out of the
  2,100 full-time students, Fetrow was able to secure 800 cell phone numbers.
  And in February, the school experienced its first major event since
  installing the communications service: an ice storm. Fetrow sent a
  voicemail to those 800 students who had volunteered their emergency
  contact numbers, telling them that classes had been cancelled.  
“A lot of students came up to me the next day and said, ‘Hey that
  was really cool; thanks for sending me a message,’” Fetrow said.
The college intends to use the service for emergency weather alerts,
  such as ice and snow delays, recruiting purposes, HazMat spills or fire
  in buildings.
Signing Up 
  "The Virginia Tech incident definitely
  raised awareness of the
  service, and at that time we
  received about 2,000 voluntary
  numbers. So now we have all
  faculty, staff and almost all of
  our students participating,”
  Fetrow said.
Incidents like Virginia Tech
  remind people that security is
  always an issue. In most
  instances, threats come unexpectedly,
  and having an emergency
  plan in place will help people
  recover from those threats.
“Emergency preparedness is
  essential now. It’s something you
  must have—the ability to get
  accurate information to the stakeholders immediately whenever a
  situation has transpired. Or after a situation has taken place, you send
  a recovery message that gives information about how you managed
  the situation and the outcome,” said Jason Bedford, director of sales
  for AlertNow.
Guilford College students, faculty and staff are able to distinguish
  an AlertNow emergency message by the 2-911 number that appears
  on caller ID, as opposed to Fetrow’s own office phone number, which
  signals a non-emergency alert. In addition, the college employs a layered
  approach when it comes to emergency communication.
“Katrina, Virginia Tech and 9/11 taught us that cell phones crash;
  systems might be busy and you may not get a cell phone call
  through,” Fetrow said.
Hence the school’s reason for also posting alerts on its Web
  site and G-Announce, an e-mail alert that goes out directly from
  Fetrow’s desk.
Knowing Everything 
  
  “To be able to communicate accurate information to people who need
  it is truly the missing part to every crisis plan,” Bedford said.
Rapid communications is a critical piece for evacuation, relocation
  and lockdown situations in both K-12 and higher education institutions,
  Bedford said. And school districts employing rapid communication
  services are seeing the benefits beyond security.
“The school principals that access AlertNow on a routine basis have
  seen tremendous gains when re-engaging the parent community and
  making them a part of the learning process,” Bedford said. “It has
  changed the way districts do business and has raised the expectation
level from parents.”
“When parents found out days after Virginia Tech that we already
  used a rapid communications system, they were very impressed with
  our preparedness. Students, who already knew about it, more or less
  just expected it,” Fetrow said.
And that might not be a sign of taking security for granted,
  but rather a mirror of society, for, according to Oscar Wilde, “The old
  believe everything, the middle-aged
  suspect everything and the young
know everything.”