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A Blueprint for Creating a Safe Campus Model

A Blueprint for Creating a Safe Campus Model. Howard Community College Innovations Conference 2012 League for Innovation in the Community College March 4, 2012. Presenters: Janice Marks, Associate VP of Student Development Shelly Bilello, Programs Administrator

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A Blueprint for Creating a Safe Campus Model

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  1. A Blueprint for Creating a Safe Campus Model Howard Community College Innovations Conference 2012 League for Innovation in the Community College March 4, 2012 Presenters: Janice Marks, Associate VP of Student Development Shelly Bilello, Programs Administrator Kimberly McNair, Director of Student Conduct

  2. Workshop Overview • HCC’s Safe Campus History • Teams Make-up and Role • Building Cross Campus Connections • Breaking Down Silos and Increasing Communications • Maintaining Best Practices through Training & Practice • Developing a Culture of Reporting • Utilizing Technology to Support Safe Campus • Maxient • Student Intervention Icon • Partnerships • MD Community College’s Chief Student Services Officers Affinity Group • MD Community College’s Statewide BIT Affinity Group • MD Community College’s Risk Management Affinity Group • Howard County and State of Maryland Linkages • Questions and Group Discussion

  3. HCC’s Safe Campus Initiatives

  4. Health & • Safety • Emergency Operations • CARE • Concern, Assessment and Response for Employees • Safe Campus • Student Conduct • Security • ASSIST • Assessment and Intervention for Students • Emergency Communications

  5. Health and Safety Team • Reviews incidents and conditions on campus and makes recommendations for corrective action • Achieves compliance with established health and safety standards • Cross-campus membership includes representatives from: • Plant Operations (Facilities, Environmental Services) • Security • Human Resources • Information Technology • Athletics • Theatre • Academic divisions • Student Government Association

  6. Health & • Safety • CARE • Concern, Assessment and Response for Employees • Emergency Operations • Safe Campus • Student Conduct • Security • ASSIST • Assessment and Intervention for Students • Emergency Communications

  7. Emergency Operations(EOP) Team • Manages all phases of emergency management: mitigation, preparedness, response and recovery • Creates and implements policies and procedures for emergencies and incidents • Identifies most common threats to the college • Conducts trainings, tests, drills and exercises • Coordinates activities with local and state agencies • Membership includes representatives from: • Administration and Finance • Safety • Security • Public Relations and Communications • Information Technology • Academic Affairs and Student Services

  8. Health & • Safety • CARE • Concern, Assessment and Response for Employees • Emergency Operations • Safe Campus • Student Conduct • Security • ASSIST • Assessment and Intervention for Students • Emergency Communications

  9. Security • Interacts with all teams including the campus community • Mission is to create and maintain a safe and secure environment • Provides services including escorts, parking, crime prevention, ID cards, 24-hour surveillance, reporting, and investigations • Responds to all incidents on campus • Collaborates with local and state law enforcement agencies • Oversees security dispatch center and CCTV • Prepares annual statistics for the campus crime report under the Jeanne Clery Disclosure of Campus Security Policy and Campus Crime Statistics Act • Conducts trainings and drills for campus community

  10. Health & • Safety • CARE • Concern, Assessment and Response for Employees • Emergency Operations • Safe Campus • Student Conduct • Security • ASSIST • Assessment and Intervention for Students • Emergency Communications

  11. Emergency Communications • Follows the National Incident Management System (NIMS) Incident Command System (ICS) • Disseminates information to the campus community • Mass notification • Emergency notification system • Immediate emergency notification • Timely warnings • Channels of communications • First alert • Updates • All-Clear • Confirms threats to the health and safety of the campus community • Coordinates communications to EOP Team, Emergency Response Team, Building Monitors, Critical College Areas, Public, and Media

  12. Emergency Communication Channels Evacuation Mobile Alert Zone Page PA system Digital clocks Email

  13. Health & • Safety • CARE • Concern, Assessment and Response for Employees • Emergency Operations • Safe Campus • Student Conduct • Security • ASSIST • Assessment and Intervention for Students • Emergency Communications

  14. ASSIST TEAM(Behavioral Intervention Team) Enrollment Services VPs of Student Services and Admin and Finance Student Conduct Academic Division Chairs & Faculty Student Life Security Athletics Facilities AVP Stud. Dev. Mental Health Counseling Disability Support Svcs

  15. ASSIST MISSION The ASSIST Team (Assessment and Intervention for Students Team) mission is to assess circumstances involving students of concern and to initiate appropriate responses to specific behavioral problems such as suicidal ideation, threats of harm to self or others, and other behaviors that demonstrate a significant disruption to the college community. The ASSIST Team provides referrals for early intervention and support for identified students to help facilitate a successful outcome for the student’s well being and the safety of the college community.

  16. ASSIST PROTOCOL • Team receives a report from security, faculty, staff, student or other member of campus community (written documentation via email or Maxient) • Team researches the incident and collects background information concerning the student, then meets for discussion • Team determines if the report is also a conduct issue and refers to student conduct for follow-up

  17. ASSIST PROTOCOL Information collected can include: • History with counseling office • Disability documentation and appointment history with disability support services • Connection with other support services like tutoring, student support services, athletics, learning communities • Prior history with student conduct office • Maryland criminal/civic court history • Social media (Facebook, MySpace, etc.) • Investigation and inquiries • Reporting parties (faculty, staff, students) • Emergency contact information

  18. ASSIST PROTOCOL Team determines the risk level NaBITA Threat Assessment Tool • http://www.nabita.org/docs/2009NABITAwhitepaper.pdf Northern Illinois University Student Threat Assessment Team’ Matrix • http://www.naspa.org/programs/threatassess/Matrix1.doc

  19. ASSIST PROTOCOL Intervention based on risk level SEVERE MODERATE MILD ELEVATED EXTREME Mandated Counseling Suspension Possibly Notify Police Monitor

  20. ASSIST PROTOCOL Close the loop and monitor the gaps • Student never removed, mild threat level, continue monitoring for future reports, determine effectiveness of interventions, if any • Student is no longer a threat and may return to campus, but will be monitored, determine effectiveness of interventions, do periodic check ins on student’s progress. • Student may return to campus with compliance with mandated sanctions; periodic checks for compliance will be monitored, determine effectiveness of interventions, monitor • Psychological and/or threat assessment determines student may return to class but must do so from a distance, if applicable • Student unable to remain on campus, as determined by student code of conduct – interim suspension goes to Disciplinary Committee to determine if suspension will stand

  21. Health & • Safety • CARE • Concern, Assessment and Response for Employees • Emergency Operations • Safe Campus • Student Conduct • Security • ASSIST • Assessment and Intervention for Students • Emergency Communications

  22. Student Conduct Mission: To create a supportive and inclusive environment that fosters personal growth and development by holding students accountable for their actions and behaviors that are inconsistent with the college’s high standards of honor and good citizenship.

  23. Health & • Safety • CARE • Concern, Assessment and Response for Employees • Emergency Operations • Safe Campus • Student Conduct • Security • ASSIST • Assessment and Intervention for Students • Emergency Communications

  24. CARE TeamConcern, Assessmentand Response for Employees • Purpose: to prevent workplace violence and to get help for employees with emotional or psychological problems • Protocol similar to ASSIST Team • Advisory Team made up of additional faculty/staff Core Team: • Human Resources leadership • Director of Security • Director of Counseling & Career Services • Director of Mediation and Conflict Resolution Center

  25. Building Cross Campus Connections Break Down Silos & Increase Communication By: • Overlap in Team Membership • Cross-Training and Tabletop Exercises • Data, data, data • Frequent Reporting to Constituencies • Solicit Feedback • Systematic review of systems and procedures, updating as appropriate

  26. Overlap in TeamMembership

  27. Health & Safety • Safety Director • CARE • Assoc. VP of HR • Emergency Operations • Programs Administrator/Risk Management • Safe Campus • Student ConductDirector Student Conduct • Security • Director of Security • ASSIST • Assoc. VP Student Development • Director Counseling & Career Srvs. • Emergency communications • Director of Communications

  28. Drills, Exercises, Tests, Training(EOP Team) • EOP Team meets every two weeks • In FY 2011, completed 4 drills, 2 tabletop exercises, 1 full-scale exercise with local law enforcement agencies, 10 tests, and 12 trainings • Recent accomplishments: • Emergency Quick Reference Guide • Web-based on-line emergency training • Three Protocol System – Evacuation, Shelter-In-Place, Lockdown • New Emergency Operations Center (EOC) • Tornado shelter assessment • Emergency notifications systems • EOP Training Video

  29. Drills, Exercises, Tests, Training(EOP Team), Cont’d • Recent accomplishments continued: • Exercises with County and State agencies • Collaboration with MEMA and FEMA • Threat Assessments • Nuclear threat preparedness • Continuity of Operations (COOP) Planning in coordination with Center of Health and Homeland Security • New Initiatives: • YouTube training video • Comic boards, academic division and SGA involvement • 3-D modeling

  30. Cross-Training & Tabletop Exercises Behavior Intervention/Treat Assessment/Aggression On-going Team Training by: • Brett Sokolow, JD (NCHERM/NaBITA) • W. Scott Lewis, JD (NCHERM/ASCA) • John Byrnes (Aggression Management) • James N. Madero, PhD (Violence Prevention International) • Margolis, Healy & Associates • Association of Threat Assessment Professionals

  31. ASSIST Training & Reporting • Visits and updates to campus groups each semester • Workshops for faculty/staff on safety initiatives, recognizing students in distress, classroom management, and How to Help a Friend and Food for Thought Series for students • Counseling E-Newsletter to Faculty and articles in student newspaper • Presentation at New Student Orientation • Student Intervention Icon demonstrations • Closing the loop with reporters

  32. Statewide BIT/ASSIST • Monthly statewide BIT meetings • Yearly reports to the MD Community College Chief Student Affairs Officers affinity group • Established MD BIT listserve and repository (Google group) • Increased MOUS with other colleges to exchange information on students who may be a threat

  33. Developing a Culture of Reporting Challenges: Strategies: Stress early intervention, solving the issue before it escalates Listen to reporters concerns, answer questions, involve supervisors as needed, and advise them on safety tips Provide training on how to report, make reporting easy and accessible- Icon • Concerned the student will get into trouble • Fear of Reporting • Don’t know how to report • “Fed up” reporting (reported when fed up, not when problem first surfaced)

  34. Utilizing Technology to Support Safe Campus • Maxient • Student Intervention Icon

  35. Faculty, Staff, Students Faculty, Staff, Students Faculty ASSIST Reports Conduct Reports Academic Reports Notifications to staff about reports Communication to students Alerts to staff about sanctions “Watch list” alerts to staff Office Management Data storage Hearings Analytics

  36. HCC Student Intervention Icon • Automatically pops up on desktop when computer is turned on • Loaded on all college staff and faculty computers and teaching stations • Accessible off campus using the college’s intranet • A one-stop resource for campus safety, emergency protocols, student referrals, reporting information, and outside resources

  37. ICON DEMONSTRATION

  38. Developing Partnerships Groups Benefits Joint training Buying Power Sharing of best practices Information Sharing Tips on students of concern- potential threats Funding for emergency planning Increase response time and performance to emergencies Better transition for students • MD. Community College Chief Student Affairs Officers • MD. Community College’s Statewide BIT Affinity Group • Howard County Police Department • Howard County General Hospital • CERN • Horizon • MD Judicial Affairs Officers • MD. Campus Security

  39. Sharing of Best Practices Do your teams use formalized protocols and strategies? How are they communicated to the college community? How do you reach and educate adjunct faculty and part time staff regarding safety initiatives? Do you have any unique and effective training strategies? Has you college been successful in fostering a comprehensive reporting culture within the institution? How? Has your college effectively broken down communication barriers/silos and integrated safety campus safety and intervention teams? How. Are your Student BIT, Employee BIT and Judicial Affairs teams supported by comprehensive databases that allow the teams to have a longitudinal view of a student/employee's behavior patterns and trends? What do you use? Does your BIT Team use risk rubrics to classify threats? Models used? Do your behavioral intervention teams utilize mandated psychological assessments, when needed, to determine interventions and threat risk? Who does the assessments? Does your BIT team have the authority to invoke involuntary medical/psychological withdrawal policies? Any questions?

  40. Presenter Contact Information Janice Marks Associate VP of Student Development: jmarks@howardcc.edu Shelly Bilello Programs Administrator: mbilello@howardcc.edu Kimberly McNair Director of Student Conduct: kmcnair@howardcc.edu

  41. Additional Resources • http://www.nabita.org/ • http://www.ncherm.org/ • http://www.luc.edu/bct/pdfs/BCT_Presentation_ski.swf(excellent on-line training) • http://www.nabita.org/docs/2009NCHERMwhitepaper.pdf • http://www.nabita.org/docs/2009NABITAwhitepaper.pdf(NaBita Threat Assessment Rubric) • http://www.theasca.org/

  42. http://www.secretservice.gov/ntac/ssi_guide.pdf Threat Assessment in Schools Guide – US Secret Service http://maxient.com/ Conduct and BIT Software http://www.sigmatma.com/books.htmlThe Handbook for Campus threat Assessment & Management Teams http://www.ecu.edu/cs-ecu/calendar.cfm?a=5&e=5761 5th Annual N.C. Higher Education Safety E-Symposium http://www.higheredcenter.org/resources/national-campus-safety-awareness-month National Campus Safety Month http://www.securityoncampus.org/ Security on Campus , Inc.

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