More than 82% of college students are concerned about their personal safety on campus. More than half report being very or extremely concerned. Is your residence hall safe enough to put students at ease? Can parents feel confident that their child is safe at school?
If any of the following five factors apply to your on-campus housing, you might have more work to do to improve your residence hall security.
Simply being a higher education institution with residence halls makes it more likely to experience crime. It makes sense – with more people spending more time on campus, there are more opportunities for crime to occur. Visitors are more common as well.
It's no secret that the bigger the city, the bigger the crime. That criminal activity trickles onto campus.
Campuses with high levels of substance abuse are more likely to experience elevated crime rates. When someone is impaired, their judgment suffers, making them more likely to break the law.
Higher education isn’t immune from the Great Resignation. Like in so many other industries, people are burning out and quitting to pursue other opportunities. As remaining staff members spread themselves thin to fill in the gaps and new employees familiarize themselves with their new roles, it’s easier for security issues to fall through the cracks.
Do your key management systems and policies give facility access to the people who need it when they need it? Are you able to prevent unauthorized people from taking keys? Are you able to track which keys, access cards, or fobs employees are using? If you answered no to any of these questions, you have security gaps you need to close.
You can’t change the first two factors — you’re not likely to permanently close your institution’s residence halls or relocate your well-established campus to a small town away from big-city crime.
You can address substance abuse and employee turnover, but they’re difficult to combat since they involve people’s independent choices.
Creating a safe living environment with effective key control is within your power.
However, creating a safe living environment with effective key control is within your power. By managing keys with an electronic key control system that controls user access, your school can cut down on incidents in which keys are either lost or end up in the hands of unauthorized individuals. Here are a few examples:
There are some uncontrollable factors that leave your residence halls vulnerable to crime, but don’t let that stop you from doing everything in your power to give residents a secure place to live. Don’t let your key control practices add to students’ — and their parents’ — worries about personal safety.
Answer the following questions and tally your responses by counting the number of times you answer 1, 2, 3, or 4.
Yes, but we could do better about sticking to it.
We don’t have a key control policy because we use electronic access control.
We do not have a written key control policy.
You store your keys in a secure spot, such as inside an electronic key control system that’s kept in a locked room. Employees must request access to unit keys individually, and their access rights are restricted by their role, shift time, and office hours. Whenever employees remove a key, you know who removed which key, when, and why, thanks to your up-to-date digital audit trail. If someone doesn’t return a key when they’re supposed to, you follow up with them immediately. Keep up the good work!
You know that key security is important. However, failing to enforce your key control policy, relying on honor-based manual logs to track key activity, or keeping keys in an insecure place can lead to access abuse or stolen keys. Take the time to re-evaluate your key control practices and improve your residence hall security.
Keyless entry systems might seem like they eliminate the need for key control, but that’s not necessarily the case. Whether you maintain backup keys to use in case of a power failure or use security tokens such as fobs or cards that function like keys, you need a written policy for managing these keys or security tokens. To hold employees accountable, it’s also important to restrict who’s authorized to program security tokens. Always avoid programming master versions of cards or fobs.
Whether it’s letting vendors use keys or keeping keys where an unauthorized person could remove them, your key control practices don’t create a safe and secure environment. To protect your residents, get control of your keys ASAP.