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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Wednesday, August 22, 2007

UH must step up pace to improve security

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The president of Parents and Friends of UH Manoa expressed exactly what many residents wondered in the wake of two break-ins — including one in which an 18-year-old female freshman was attacked — at University of Hawai'i dorms.

"How could this have happened?" asked Dr. Theresa Wee, and UH officials certainly owe her, and the rest of the community, an answer.

Leaving the Hale Aloha dormitory lobby desk unmanned in the wee hours of the morning, as it's been on some days, forces the student residents to assume too great a risk.

It's heartening that lobby staffing is being expanded, as it should, to 24/7 coverage, and that $2 million is being spent on lighting and other improvements.

Also, security officials are working on a plan to require lobby check-in for the freshman dormitories. The current protocol for after-hours access to the dorms — the use of a key to open the building door and operate the elevator — is evidently insufficient to protect students. It's essential that direct oversight of entrances be implemented as soon as possible.

The campus administration has been meeting with faculty and staff, as well as with a safety and security committee that included students. So far, administrators have contemplated three security options:

  • Open a campus substation staffed by armed sheriffs from the state Department of Public Safety who could be summoned if guards need added intervention. Some have suggested a Honolulu Police Department substation as an alternative scenario. These would be officers already trained, so it represents the least-expensive alternative.

  • Add campus security guards. This would cost the university slightly more, owing to the need to cover training and all personnel costs.

  • Establish an independent, armed campus police force — the most expensive and problematic option. Creating a duplicate armed force would not make the campus safer, with trained enforcement agents already available.

    Several funding hoops would need clearing before any change is made, so the pace of these discussions must accelerate. Letting the situation languish will do nothing to create the welcoming campus community that everyone wants in Manoa.