Click here to receive your FREE subscription to Campus Technology
Home > Emergency Notification: Penn State Stays on Message
Campus Safety
Emergency Notification: Penn State Stays on Message
11/15/2007
By Linda L Briggs
With 80,000 students and 24 campuses across a state that's intimately familiar with inclement weather, Pennsylvania State University clearly needs a reliable--and redundant--system of emergency notification.
A year ago, the university added text messaging alerts via cell phone to its system, which already included an overlapping set of outlets including the Penn State Live news site, e-mail, public broadcasting, and an extensive and popular subscription-based weekly newswire service tied into Penn State Live. "We never rely on just text messaging to get information out in an emergency," according to Annemarie Mountz, assistant director of public information.
Some 18,000 subscribers have signed up for the text messaging service, from Omnilert's e2Campus service, which can send a text message of up to 125 characters to subscriber cell phones. Subscribers, which include students, faculty, staff, and even a local reporter, can indicate their home campus and whether they want to receive emergency notifications by e-mail, text message, or both.
According to Mountz, "Students have told us that they want to be informed." Beginning this fall, staying informed became that much easier--all students were invited to join the e2Campus notification system when they logged onto PSU's e-Lion site and supplied emergency notification data as part of the registration process. That information was then be used to initiate a subscription to text messaging.
One important criterion for Penn State in selecting the messaging system: no advertisements. Mountz said sending ads to students who signed up for a notification system, as some systems do, would violate university policy and might dilute attention paid to any true emergency messages. The system is used only for designated emergencies: The university sent just one text message a month in June and July, and two in May. "We are very careful about the alerts we send," Mountz said. "We don't send one unless there's something important to tell."
Alerts tend to be weather-related--a suspected tornado in the Pittsburg area in May or extremely high winds that knocked over utility poles on campus, again in May, along with winter class cancellations owing to snow.
When the university selected the system last year, it also liked the fact that the system is housed off campus by e2Campus. "If we have an emergency that shuts down our Internet," Mountz said, "we can [initiate] a text message through a smart phone."
That's because e2Campus isn't directly linked into any IT system infrastructure, so it can still be used if Penn State's computer systems are down or if power is out. It could also be used as a failover communication system in a pinch, using handheld devices such as Trios, Blackberries, or smart phones.
Also important to Penn State: the system's ability to target messages to specific groups. Since the likelihood of a state-wide emergency in which a message would be sent to every subscriber is slim, it's important that e2Campus easily let subscribers choose groups to belong to, generally their home campuses; messages can be targeted to specific groups.
Recommended Reading
- Tufts Grants Rights for Mileage-Increasing Transportation Technology to Electric Truck
Tufts University has optioned rights to a technology that can recharge the batteries of any hybrid electric and electric-powered vehicle while it is driven. The Tufts-developed technology could increase by 20 percent to 70 percent the miles per gallon or total driving range performance of vehicles like the Honda Civic, Ford Escape, and Toyota Prius hybrids and the Tesla Motors and Phoenix Motorcars electric vehicles.
- U Florida and Cyntellect Collaborate to Unlock Mysteries of Cancer Stem Cells
The University of Florida has entered into a research agreement with life sciences company Cyntellect. The university's Interdisciplinary Center for Biotechnology Research will work with the company to focus on a variety of research areas including the purification and analysis of cancer stem cells (CSCs), rare cells believed to be directly involved in propagating cancers.
- George Mason U Receives Grant To Deploy Intergraph Apps for Intelligence Curriculum
George Mason University (GMU) in Fairfax, VA has been awarded a grant from Intergraph to enable students enrolled in GMU's Geospatial Intelligence Graduate Certificate program to use the company's geospatial production and exploitation software as part of their core curriculum.
- Institute for Cyber Security at U Texas, San Antonio Opens Incubator
The University of Texas at San Antonio (UTSA) Institute for Cyber Security (ICS) has launched a new Internet security incubator. The incubator was developed to commercialize promising technologies that address major cyber security and privacy issues. The first companies to enter the incubator are Denim Labs and SafeMashups.
- ISO/IEC Publishes Office Open XML Standard
ISO/IEC has published the Office Open XML (OOXML) file format standard, formally known as ISO/IEC 29500:2008. It describes file formats originally designed by Microsoft for its Office 2007 productivity suite, which are used in presentation, spreadsheet and word processing applications.
- Dynamics NAV 2009 ERP Coming Next Month
Microsoft exec Kirill Tatarinov Wednesday described some new features to expect in the forthcoming Microsoft Dynamics NAV 2009 enterprise resource planning solution. He gave the keynote address at Microsoft's Convergence 2008 event in Copenhagen, Denmark.