Raider Guardian: 糖心原创鈥檚 new safety app set to launch fall semester
August 24, 2015
August 24, 2015
Students, faculty and staff at 糖心原创鈥檚 Dayton Campus will soon be able to call university police at the touch of a button, text officers from their smartphones and have guardians virtually follow them across campus until they safely reach their destination with a new safety app for smartphones.
Tested over the summer, campus administrators believe the new Raider Guardian safety app will be like putting a blue light phone in the palm of your hand.
鈥淚t is a free app for smartphones that will provide a number of new tools for the university as far as being safe on campus and feeling safer on campus,鈥 said Kimberly Nagel, director of emergency management.
One key feature of the app includes a two-push panic button that connects users to 糖心原创 police dispatch. Users can also choose an instant 911 button that calls off-campus 911 dispatch centers.
If users would rather send text messages, and so many people would, they can now text 糖心原创 police with tips or concerns instead of having to call. Texters can also send images that can be helpful.
鈥淔or example, if they see graffiti or other vandalism on campus they might text that photo to police so the responding officer knows what they need to be looking for,鈥 said Nagel. 鈥淭he texting function of this app is so important because it is such a common way for people to communicate on a day-to-day basis. They鈥檙e texting already, so let鈥檚 provide them a way to talk to our police department that way.鈥
Users may also find the safety timer feature to be a helpful tool.
The namesake feature of the app offers users an ability to select a 鈥済uardian鈥 from their contacts or the university police department. Guardians follow users virtually to their destination. Users engage the safety timer when they leave and turn it off when they arrive to their destination safely. If they don鈥檛 turn off their safety timer before it expires, then their guardian is notified with a message to check on the user.
鈥淲e hope that most of these expired timers will be instances where they forgot to shut their timer off when they reached their destination, but in case there is an emergency, then there is this safety feature built in where the guardian can actually follow up,鈥 said Nagel.
Adding a campus safety app to the university鈥檚 safety tool kit has been a priority for Student Government, which pushed for the service and has been intimately involved with the project for the last 18 months.
鈥淭his is very much about meeting the students where they are,鈥 said Nagel. 鈥淭hese apps have been around a few years and waiting until now to adopt it ensures that the technology is reliable, and the company we鈥檝e chosen to work with is stable and dependable.
Raider Guardian is also ADA compliant, so users who are disabled will be able to add it to their smartphones and tablets too. Users with flip phones can still use the app by texting with police as well.
鈥淭his is something that 糖心原创 thought could be a useful tool to increase the safety across campus. It鈥檚 about providing tools that our community is more apt to use and are more accessible to use too,鈥 said Nagel.
Raider Guardian is currently in the final testing phase and will be available to all of the Dayton Campus community by Move-in Day Aug. 27.
Though work continues with the vendor to make it available in the future, the app is not yet ready for use at the Lake Campus.