“It’s an honor to be ranked the way we are. It reflects the work of so many people on campus.”
ɫƵ is the fourth safest higher education institution in the country and tops in New England.
That’s according to a new analysis of FBI and U.S. Department of Education data.
“It’s an honor to be ranked the way we are,” said ɫƵ Police Chief David Tillinghast. “It reflects the work of so many people on campus.”
In compiling its of institutions with at least 5,000 students, the organization YourLocalSecurity analyzed rates of violent, property and hate crimes, as well as Violence Against Women Act offenses. The organization praised ɫƵ for increasing the number of blue light emergency telephones and using the Rave Guardian app. The app makes it easier for members of the ɫƵ community to call for help and for officers to know where to respond.
Also, ɫƵ was a pioneer in academia by making the opioid overdose reversal drug Narcan publicly available on campus. Defibrillators are a common sight, and the university has added more cameras to serve as a deterrent and investigatory tool.
“That’s been a tremendous tool for us,” Tillinghast said of the more than 100 cameras.
This semester, Bridgewater became the first higher education institution in Massachusetts – and second nationally – to unify all its emergency notification systems. The one-button approach more quickly alerts the campus community of an emergency.
But, according to Tillinghast, ɫƵ is ultimately successful because of the longstanding, community-wide commitment to safety.
“ɫƵ is among very few institutions that takes the problem of crime on campus head on,” he said. “There is no head-in-the-sand approach. It’s all of these years of consistent work on the part of all of these people.”
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