For release: Dec. 21, 2012
News and Media Relations contact: Jimmy Hart, 615-898-5131 or Jimmy.Hart@mtsu.edu
MTSU Police contact: Chief
Buddy Peaster, 615-898-2424 or Buddy.Peaster@mtsu.edu
MURFREESBORO — MTSU
students returning to campus in the new year will notice an extra security
presence in high traffic areas.
In late November, the university hired two uniformed
security guards, a move aimed at providing a consistent, visible presence within
the sprawling Murfreesboro campus.
“We are doing this in order to provide more contact with our
community members in specific areas of campus … namely, a few areas where we
expect more people congregate and use in the typical business work week,” MTSU
Police Chief Buddy Peaster said.
The university is contracting with Allegiance Security Group
LLC to provide the unarmed guards, who began working just after Thanksgiving
and typically will work Monday through Friday from 8 a.m. to 4:30 p.m.
Initial patrols are focusing on three significant buildings
on campus: the James E. Walker Library, the Student Health, Wellness and
Recreation Center and the Student Union Building.
“The main thrust initially is to have uniformed security
guards to interact with the public to answer questions and to help with
problems,” Peaster said. “They also will be a part of crime deterrence
strategies in that they will maintain a visible security presence and can
contact MTSU Police with any concerns or problems.”
Peaster explained that regular MTSU Police officers have to
respond to calls for service and cannot easily be stationed in one location. The
security guards will be utilized in specific areas and can be dedicated to
smaller concentrated areas, he said.
The cost runs between $40,000 and $50,000 for two security
guards for an entire year, an expense Peaster says “is a less expensive way to
utilize a security presence in specific areas of campus.”
Other universities such as the University of Memphis,
Vanderbilt University and the University of Tennessee-Knoxville already utilize
security guards within their staffs, Peaster said, adding that most of the
college campuses that Allegiance Security works for are in Florida. Allegiance
has guards at Hillsborough Community College in Tampa, Fla., and at Polk State
University in Winter Haven, Fla.
In addition to MTSU, Allegiance Security currently places
personnel in several locations in Tennessee including Memphis, Nashville and
Chattanooga. Besides MTSU, Allegiance Security has security guards working
locally at the Nashville International Airport, Fleet One in Antioch, and
Cinram in La Vergne.
MTSU Police Sgt. David Smith serves as liaison between the
university and Allegiance Security and meets with the guards each morning to
discuss assignments for the day. Smith emphasized that the guards don’t have
police authority and that their purpose is to alert university police officers
of problems or potential problems. The guards are equipped with two-way radios
and are in constant contact with university police.
“It frees us up,” Smith said. “It’s impractical for patrol
officers to do extended periods of foot patrol like security guards could.”
The presence of guards is also expected to protect personal
property better.
“We have a problem of unattended items getting stolen on a
regular basis,” said Smith, recalling an example on the first day of fall
semester in which an unattended backpack was stolen inside the university
bookstore, resulting in the student victim losing a tablet computer, a laptop,
books and several other items.
Smith said the security guards will caution students about
unattended items as well as inform staff in buildings such as the Campus
Recreation Center about unattended items in locker rooms and other areas.
“We think it will be a deterrent and a good policing effort
on our part to make the campus community feel a bit safer,” Smith said.
###
Note to media: High
resolution photos attached
CAPTIONS
MTSU
SecurityGuards-1.jpg
MTSU is contracting
with Allegiance Security Group to provide two unarmed security guards in
high-traffic areas on campus. (Photo by MTSU News and Media Relations)
MTSU
SecurityGuards-2.jpg
Christopher
Cunningham of Allegiance Security Group patrols outside the James E. Walker Library
earlier this month. Cunningham is one of two security guards MTSU has hired to
patrol high-traffic areas on campus, such as the library. (Photo by MTSU News
and Media Relations)
MTSU is committed to
developing a community devoted to learning, growth, and service. We hold these
values dear, and there’s a simple phrase that conveys them: “I am True
Blue.” Learn more at www.mtsu.edu/trueblue.
For MTSU news anytime, visit www.MTSUNews.com.
No comments:
Post a Comment