Safety
- Current CU Boulder students can choose their preferred language for emergency alerts during fall preregistration. Learn more.
- The Oversight Community Review Board of the CU Police Department continues to provide community benefits by including members with various backgrounds in hiring, policy decisions and more.
- Alcohol and other substances are often used to commit sexual assault. Here are some things you should know about drug-facilitated sexual assault and drink spiking.
- A new funding award will be used by CUPD to attract and keep officers through increased training and community engagement.
- After a week in which the university sent emergency alerts sharing information on several incidents in the city of Boulder, Chiefs Doreen Jokerst and Maris Herold explain how the public safety agencies cooperate with one another and how campus stakeholders can stay informed of emergency information.
- As part of the continuous assessment of our emergency notification protocols and procedures, campus officials will test the CU Boulder alerts system on the afternoon of Tuesday, March 21.
- The campus’s new practice of alerting stakeholders to off-campus incidents can raise questions about the nature, reasoning and terminology of notifications, as evidenced this week. CU Boulder Police Chief Doreen Jokerst discusses.
- There’s an additional way to receive notifications during all three levels of alerts, not just for CU Emergency Alerts.
- CU Boulder has a sophisticated approach to identifying and sharing concerns. Here’s what to do if you think someone needs help.
- CU Boulder Police Chief Doreen Jokerst wants to remind faculty and staff how to recognize and report behaviors of concern, including information about how CUPD and the university respond once authorities are made aware.