蹤獲扦-Dearborn ranked safest public university in Michigan

January 16, 2013

Their vehicles are spotted in campus parking lots throughout the week.

stateuniversity.com Ranked #3 safest in Michigan logo

Their employees are often on patrol in campus buildings.

Its all about visibility for University of Michigan-Dearborns Department of Public Safety. Campus police Chief Rick Gordon implemented a community-policing program a few years ago to deter crime.

The more they see us, the more opportunistic people will go somewhere else, he said. The whole concept behind prevention is denying the opportunity.

So far, Gordons plan has worked. For the second year in a row, StateUniversity.com ranked 蹤獲扦-Dearborn as the safest public university in Michigan.

The website, which provides information about colleges and universities, the nations safest institutions based on crime statistics, like burglary, larceny and aggravated assault.

Student safety and campus crime are sometimes overlooked during the college evaluation process, said Dominik Mazur, founder of StateUniversity.com. We believe it is important for students to be aware of crime on campus and in the surrounding community.

Only two Michigan community colleges Oakland Community College and Delta College were ranked ahead of 蹤獲扦-Dearborn, in regard to campus safety, according to StateUniversity.com. The university also ranks 67th nationally.

We are very proud of that, Gordon said. Were lucky that we have a good campus community, too.

Gordon credits his 22 officers for increasing the departments visibility, thus decreasing crime.

The community-policing model emphasizes being proactive, rather than reactive, he said. We try to give the impression of being everywhere all the time.

No burglaries, aggravated assaults or motor vehicle thefts were reported in 2011 on campus, according to the departments 2012-13 annual security report.

Gordon said his department also works closely with the City of Dearborns Police Department on investigations, and he notifies students, faculty and staff via email when officers detect an ongoing crime trend.