Sept. 5, 2023
Full test of VCU Alert system scheduled for Sept. 6 at noon
The multichannel system communicates emergency information to VCU students, faculty, staff, visitors and the surrounding community.
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Virginia Commonwealth University will conduct a full test of its emergency communications and alerting systems, including sirens, on the Monroe Park and MCV campuses and at the VCU Police Department’s headquarters, 224 E. Broad St., at noon on Wednesday, Sept. 6.
The test will include a one-minute siren activation, along with text messages, mass email, Alertus boxes, digital signs, desktop alerts, the LiveSafe app, the VCU Mobile app, the VCU Facebook page and VCU Alert website information — all part of a multichannel system for communicating emergency information to the university and surrounding community. (Watch the VCU Alert system video to learn more about how, and when, police will issue alerts.)
Ten minutes before the test, VCU Alert emergency text and email subscribers will receive a message indicating that testing begins at noon; they will also receive a text message at noon to signify the start. VCU Police will send a third message once testing has concluded.
The following list contains more information about each of VCU’s alerting technologies:
Outdoor sirens: Sirens on the Monroe Park and MCV campuses, and at VCU Police headquarters, could be activated to signal that an immediate, life-threatening emergency has occurred or may be imminent. The purpose of the siren is to alert people outside buildings that there is an active threat to their safety. In a real emergency, if you hear a siren, emergency text and email messages, Alertus boxes, digital signs, desktop alerts, the LiveSafe app, the VCU Mobile app, the VCU Facebook page and the VCU Alert website will notify you about the type of emergency that is occurring and the actions you should take immediately.
Text messages: These messages will notify VCU Alert emergency text subscribers about the type of emergency and the actions you should take immediately. You must be subscribed to VCU Alert texts to receive these messages.
Mass email: VCU Alert text message subscribers may also subscribe to receive the same alert messages via email. (Following certain types of emergency events and criminal incidents, those with VCU and VCU Health email addresses will automatically receive a VCU Alert email.)
- VCU students, faculty and staff can subscribe to VCU Alert emergency text messages, and emails, through the myVCU portal by clicking on “General Resources” and “Manage Emergency Alerts.” VCU Health team members, parents and community members can sign up here. The VCU Police Department advises everyone to make sure their subscription statuses are current.
Alertus boxes: These devices are in classrooms, residence halls and other high-traffic areas throughout campus. They are designed to provide an auditory and visual alert when a threat has occurred or is imminent. Much like text messages, information would scroll on the screen during an emergency.
Digital signs: Digital displays are located throughout campus, with a focus in high-traffic areas. These signs would display emergency alerting information.
Desktop alerts: The majority of VCU-supported computers (and many “Mac” products) provide full-screen notifications on workstations in offices, laboratories, classrooms and study spaces. These messages would display emergency alerting information.
LiveSafe and VCU Mobile notifications: VCU LiveSafe and VCU Mobile users would receive a “push” message through the LiveSafe application that would include emergency alerting information.
Social media: Emergency alerting information would be posted to the VCU Facebook page.
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