UW Students Fear for Safety

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The start of fall quarter at the University of Washington is usually about reuniting with friends, the beginning of football season, and crisp autumn weather. Unfortunately, this year, students were also welcomed back to campus with several violent crimes. There have been several disturbing crimes in recent months, particularly in the University District neighborhood. Some University of Washington students are getting fed up. 

During the first weekend of October, there were two shootings. In the first incident, four university students received non-life-threatening injuries and were transported to a local hospital. A mere 23 hours later, there was another report of gunshots, and an individual fleeing the scene in a car ended up hitting and killing a 21-year-old pedestrian. 

The following Tuesday, October 4, police arrested a man living in the University District in connection with the murder and dismemberment of an Indigenous woman. Her body had been found in the university’s Kincaid Ravine in June, and this arrest was the first in connection with her murder since the body had been found. 

The next weekend in the early morning hours of October 9, a house in the University District was stalked repeatedly throughout the night, with the resident’s security camera catching the man attempting to enter the house the first time around 2:30 am. After a few more attempts of entering, the man eventually was able to break in and subsequently assaulted a person living in the house at gunpoint. 

Image captured by residential Ring security camera.

Fears surrounding crime at the University of Washington come amid high-profile crimes on or near other college campuses around the country. At the University of Idaho, four students were murdered in the early morning hours of Nov. 13. Ominously, the investigation remains ongoing and unsolved. At the University of Virginia, three members of the football team were shot and killed, also on Nov. 13. On Nov. 19, two people were shot, one fatally, during an altercation at the University of Mexico.

In light of criminal activity around the university, U.W. President Ana Mari Cauce established the Campus Community Safety Project last December. The project looks at many aspects of safety such as emergency preparedness, working with University District partnerships and organizations, and designating independent entities to decide who is the best to dispatch on a case-by-case basis. Sally Clark, the university’s Director of Regional and Community Relations, was picked to head the safety project that began in last winter. 

“This new division will bring greater focus to UW’s safety effort, allow for a vice president to be wholly committed to and accountable for safety, and define one place in the broad university structure responsible for instigating and nurturing efforts at reimagining safety,” said Clark, who formerly was a Seattle City Councilwoman, about her new position.

Timothy Billing, the current president of the Associated Students of the University of Washington (ASUW), is conferring with the university about safety policies and resources. â€śThe overall solution is that we need to completely reexamine and uproot the structures that have primarily been set up by white people, to look at how we can come together as a community to change how we look at safety,” said Billing. “It’s hard to have a single solution, but it’s really prioritizing resources that will help people as opposed to just criminalizing and incarcerating people.”

Billing emphasized the necessity of community input and feedback in discussions of safety. He also commented that he would like to see an increase in community outreach on the university’s part. “In my opinion, [The University of Washington] can be doing more on outreach and communication, and there’s nothing stopping them,” said Billing.

Emma Cochran is a junior at the University of Washington and the president of her sorority, Pi Beta Phi. Her sorority’s chapter house is in the University District, near many other Greek organizations. “I would say, due to the precautionary measures that our sorority house has taken to make sure we are safe, I feel safe inside of the house,” said Cochran. “However, when I leave the house I immediately feel unsafe.”

Her chapter house has an electronic key system, a monitor, an intercom, only one exterior door knob, and alarm systems on their side and back doors. They also utilize safety alert systems.  Cochran, alongside other Panhellenic and Interfraternity Council presidents, requested a meeting with Clark to discuss the current state of safety off-campus. They proposed potential solutions and inquired about police involvement in off-campus matters. 

“The issue was just getting out of hand. When the first shooting happened, it was about 36 hours until the university released a statement about that,” observed Cochran. “And as a Panhellenic president and a Panhellenic and Greek community member, I can confidently say we are doing everything in our power to keep our members safe.” She added: “But when it comes to the university’s position, I’m also a student, and there are 36,000 students on this campus that probably had no idea that that [incident] happened. And that makes me mad.”

Since the meeting, she said the university has not again reached out to the sorority and fraternity presidents that met with them last month. Cochran is feeling frustrated with the university’s approach to student safety. 

In researching this story, I received 80 student responses when I sent out a survey on Facebook, Instagram, and GroupMe about campus safety. The responses showed there is not a high level of trust in the University of Washington’s ability to keep students safe. Of those respondents, many reported frustrations with the way the university approaches safety for off-campus students, and also noted difficulties when it came to interactions with the University of Washington Police Department and the Seattle Police Department. 

“The UWPD and SPD confusion in the houses north of campus really leaves the area feeling vulnerable,” said  student Hannah Chu, one of the respondents. “An incident occurred with someone outside my window and there was no recourse with UWPD or SPD.”

When it came to the University of Washington Police Department and the Seattle Police Department, many students expressed similar experiences calling 911, when each police department would direct the student to call the other one. 

Doug Schulz, a lieutenant with the University of Washington Police Department, emphasized that the University of Washington Police Department’s jurisdiction is the university buildings, parking lots, and residence halls. The rest of the off-campus and Greek housing are under Seattle Police Department’s jurisdiction. “Basically, it’s where the crime actually happens that determines who does the follow-up on it,” said Schulz. 

UW Campus.

Even so, some off-campus students say they have experienced the Seattle Police Department redirecting their calls to the university’s police department, even though they are out of the UWPD jurisdiction.

Bill Schrier, the Interim Strategic Advisor for Seattle Community Safety and Communications Center (SCSCC), which includes the Seattle 911 Center, said he has never heard of such an occurrence and will be conducting an internal investigation. “If they call here, and get sent to the University of Washington center, and get directed back here, they should definitely ask to speak to a supervisor,” said Schrier. “I do want to hear about any incident where people were transferred back and forth… I’m concerned about any calls that are transferred – one transfer is okay, but two transfers, we have to figure that out.”

Some students in the survey believe that the University of Washington needs to update its safety systems, including collaboration among entities involved in safety surrounding the university. And that this issue needs to be prioritized. 

“I think they have started to take steps. I don’t think it’s been communicated that well to the community though,” said ASUW President Billing. “In terms of these institutions, you really have to be transparent and really have to actively work to update the community. I know that’s something they are working on, but I think that’s the next step.”

Maggie Piper
Maggie Piper
Maggie Piper is a senior at the University of Washington studying Journalism and Political Science. After growing up in California, she moved to Seattle for college; following graduation, hopes to pursue a career in political journalism or law. Piper is a student in the University of Washington’s News Lab class

9 COMMENTS

  1. “This new division will bring greater focus to UW’s safety effort…and nurturing efforts at reimagining safety,” said [Sally] Clark.

    “The overall solution is that we need to completely reexamine and uproot the structures that have primarily been set up by white people, to look at how we can come together as a community to change how we look at safety,” said [Timothy] Billing. “It’s hard to have a single solution, but it’s really prioritizing resources that will help people as opposed to just criminalizing and incarcerating people.”

    In other words, “Sit with your discomfort” and “Do the work”.

    It’s this Critical Social Justice cultism, not “structures set up by white people” that have given criminals more rights and consideration than their victims.

    Best case scenario, the city & state will pay off (“restore”) victims of crime with taxpayer money instead of holding criminals accountable.

    • Let’s be charitable and presume that Billings’ quotes were garbled and mixed up by a brand-new linotype operator.

  2. Welcome to Post Alley, Maggie. Thanks for this well-sourced snapshot of campus anxiety about safety. It gives those of us no longer on campus a current feel for how the various active parties in the campus bubble express themselves.

  3. I was a drama student at the UW in the early 1970s, working as a stage hand. This was back when Ted Bundy was still picking off women who were out and about alone. I often worked on all-female crews, and we would walk each other partway home after rehearsals or performances, and then call each other when we got back to make sure everyone was safe. The current state of unrest in the U District and elsewhere feels more intense to me than my own experiences, but it is a difference of degree, not of kind.

  4. I critiqued this piece on Safe Seattle. (See link below.) The author left out considerable background material that would have been useful to understanding the coordination issues between UWPD and SPD.

    The quote from Mr. Billing is laughable. Students are worried about assaults, shootings, and murders, and this guy is talking about “uprooting power structures”? Why did you include that gaslighting nonsense in the article? It’s an insult to the victims.

    https://www.facebook.com/safeseattle.org/posts/pfbid02UEaPpC2ixDnEpW7HsH7tYP7wAxur6bEJvDEpvihdtMKZWEFhYKmcTxNski8trcbjl

  5. Great article Maggie, I agree with the students concerns for their safety. The faculty, nurses and staff on the Campus have expressed their concern as well.
    I don’t feel Ana Mari as well as Sally Clark are being very honest with you, since Ana Mari reduced the UW Police Dept by 6-FTE’s and the University continues to reduce staffing. I believe the Board of Regents as well as Ana Mari are merely politicians and fail to realize how unsafe the students are and try to minimize the reality.

  6. I am curious what titles were considered for this story, and why “fear for safety” was chosen as the subject rather than crime itself. Given the actual crimes occurring on this campus and elsewhere I would say the actual subject is violent crime, assault and homicide at universities, which leads, for any logical person, to fear and concern for safety. By making it a story firstly about “fear” this piece plays into the Leftist / Democratic Party rhetoric that dismisses concern about crime as merely “fear mongering” from the right. Which is how we end up with a neutered and dismantled public safety system, and more crime. Painful and revealing to see the completely vacuous statements from Clark and Billing. I hope the parents who pay tuition are reading.

  7. Some big assumptions and BS non-solutions by bureaucratic people way overpaid to provide them.

    The students are assuming the staff and both law enforcement agencies even care about student safety. As long as the staff and officer’s paychecks get cut on time and the benefits continue, not much will change.

    Most every competent law enforcement agency in the state has MOU’s (memorandums of understanding) with their surrounding agencies for support and extending jurisdictions so not working together for solutions is by choice or just pure BS.

    Go woke and go broke, get robbed, get raped or end up dead. Those all are nonworking solutions. Drop the woke and racist BS and get to work.

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