The University of Houston is expanding its emergency communication
efforts with plans to install three sirens across campus in
April.
“UH will add civil defense-type sirens on the roofs
of three buildings—the Center for Public Broadcasting,
the Campus Recreation and Wellness Center and the Texas Learning
and Computation Center Annex,” said Dave Irvin, associate
vice president for plant operations and Emergency Management
Committee chairman. “The sirens will be audible across
the campus and for several blocks surrounding UH.”
Currently, UH communicates information about emergencies in
multiple ways, including notification on its home page and
e-mail and text messages. The sirens will provide “a
great, low-cost system to fill in our communication gaps by
alerting people when they are not looking at their computer
monitors or their cell phones,” Irvin said.
The sirens, which cost $41,000, will notify the campus community
using one blast.
“Once they hear the sirens, faculty, staff and
students should immediately go to other sources to get details
about the emergency,” Irvin said.
The decision to install the sirens came in the wake of the
fatal shootings at Virginia Tech University last year.
“After studying various possibilities, administrators
decided to design and install an emergency siren system last
fall,” Irvin said. “Implementation was delayed
because of a backlog in obtaining equipment from manufacturers.”
Other Texas higher education institutions that own emergency
siren system include Baylor and Texas Tech universities and
The University of Texas at Austin.
Francine Parker
fparker@central.uh.edu