When Virginia Tech's 28,000 students return to classes for the fall on Monday, they will benefit from another emergency mass notification system added over the summer in response to the April 2007 campus killings of 32 people by a lone gunman.
Virginia Tech hopes to have finished installing 220 text-message displays by Monday in its general purpose classrooms and large lecture halls. The displays will be used to convey emergency messages about campus crimes or bad weather to students who are not supposed to be using cell phones in class and might not be able to hear outdoor emergency sirens, a school spokesman said Wednesday.
The OnAlert displays from Inova Solutions use LEDs and can scroll text alerts left to right or top to bottom on a display about 3 feet wide and 6 inches high. Inova, based in Charlottesville, Va., near the Virginia Tech campus in Blacksburg, was picked as the display vendor after the first anniversary of the shootings last April, Virginia Tech spokesman Mark Owczarski said.
When state officials conducted a review of campus safety and security about a year ago, in-classroom displays were recommended as a means of supplementing an alert system already implemented that provides text alerts, e-mail alerts and postings on campus Web sites, Owczarski said. In addition, an audible siren system installed several years ago for severe weather warnings can be used for other types of emergencies.
The OnAlert displays cost about $220,000, but that does not include the cost of programming the signs and installing them, he said. They connect to an existing Ethernet network and provide messages that are already generated over the e-mail, text and Web system, with programming to allow the message to fit logically on the message boards and still be readable from a distance.
When the safety reviews after the tragedy were done, officials noted that classrooms at Virginia Tech did not have a public address system, which school officials said would be too expensive to install across 100 buildings on hundreds of acres. "We felt anything we could do to improve safety for students and faculty, we should do," Owczarski said.
The university also recently updated its software for a voice-based emergency telephone alert system, which had required sending messages to 8,000 phones in eight different batches, but now will only require five batches, saving time in distribution, Owczarski said. Also, the campus added another dozen of the well-known "blue light" phones stationed around the campus grounds for making an emergency call to campus police bringing the total to more than 75.
The university added its VT Alerts text messaging system in July 2007, but had already started implementing it when the shootings occurred. That system is provided by National Notification Network in Glendale, Calif., which has a contract to operate the system for three years for about $200,000, Owczarski said.
"Are we safer because of all this technology? That's hard to say, but safety is and always has been the number one question on the minds of parents dropping off their children in the fall," Owczarski said.