
University of Colorado at Boulder |
Representatives of the city of Boulder and CU-Boulder, including student leaders, announce new safety initiatives at a recent presentation on campus. |
The University of Colorado at Boulder is adding six more campus police officers and will improve campus lighting and transportation systems among other initiatives as a result of a survey conducted by a leading student advocacy group and a partner safety coalition.
With the survey, the University of Colorado Student Union (UCSU) and the Safety Initiatives Coalition attempted to gather information that would facilitate the design and implementation of strategies aimed at increasing campus and communitywide safety, said UCSU Tri-Executive Tom Higginbotham.
"We're focusing our efforts on strengthening the relationship between UCSU and the administration, which will help us to tackle these and other tough issues with improved communication, collaboration and coordination," the student leader said during a news conference on Aug. 20 to announce the survey results and recommended safety improvements.
The Safety Initiatives Coalition, a collaborative group of representatives from both CU and the city of Boulder, assisted with the online survey in March. The survey's main themes were lighting maintenance, parking and transportation, police visibility, reporting concerns and communication.
Higginbotham said student leaders were inspired to survey attitudes about campus and community safety following a series of off-campus assaults in 2008.
According to the survey, which is expected to become an annual report, 89.3 percent of respondents reported feeling "very safe" or "somewhat safe" on the CU-Boulder campus, and 74.4 percent reported feeling "very safe" or "somewhat safe" in the community surrounding the campus, said Eva Hueber, UCSU director of neighborhood and city relations at the time of the survey who oversaw its compilation.
Hueber said 2,345 students, faculty and staff volunteered to answer the survey, but the sample was not representative. Female respondents accounted for almost 70 percent of respondents, and outnumbered male respondents two to one, a fact that likely influenced the results. Faculty and staff accounted for about 25 percent of survey respondents, and 17 percent of all respondents identified as victims of crimes perpetuated on campus or in Boulder.
Among the other conclusions:
- Women feel more vulnerable than men on campus and in the city of Boulder.
- The campus community's perception of safety can be improved through enhanced institutional safety measures and improved communication among CU administrators, employees and students.
- Survey respondents felt they would feel safer with increased lighting and police presence and additional options for late-night transportation and parking.
"We had been checking these areas, but on an irregular schedule," Bruno said. "The students were helpful in identifying that the irregular evaluation schedule was having a possible impact on safety, so we're grateful to them for helping us make that improvement."