The Daily Pennsylvanian is a student-run nonprofit.

Please support us by disabling your ad blocker on our site.

In the fall, students walking around campus at night will notice a lot fewer Spectaguards on patrol -- but those that are will be increasingly mobile. Though the University customarily hires fewer Spectaguard security guards to patrol campus in the summer months, it will not increase the levels when the fall semester arrives, according to University Security Director Stratis Skoufalos. Instead, the University is in the process of replacing many of the Spectaguards currently on walking patrol with a new unit of bike patrols, based on the successful models of the Penn Police and the University City District's safety ambassadors. But Skoufalos maintained that the decline in the number of Spectaguards is not a cause for concern given frequent changes in the past. "The number of Spectaguard officers that is assigned here is a fluctuating number," he said. "This is just another one of our deployment things." The University's plan, Skoufalos said, is to cover the same areas in and around campus more efficiently by putting two wheels underneath its patrol officers. "We can be effective covering more ground and more responsive to campus needs by being mobile on bicycles," he said. "We thought it was a natural evolution." Larry Rubin, a spokesperson for Spectaguard, said that no officers would be fired as a result of these changes. The guards being taken from the Penn campus this summer will be permanently re-assigned to other Spectaguard accounts. But Spectaguard Assistant Vice President Gesi McAllister did note that the personnel shifts could have an economic impact on the officers themselves. Spectaguards on walking patrol make at least $10 per hour, while the officers moved to "interior positions" -- such as working at residential desks -- make as little as $8 an hour for the less "physically demanding" work. "There aren't that many jobs that pay as much [as the walking patrol positions], but then again, they're not doing the same work," McAllister said. "Most of them will wind up making less." None of the Spectaguards approached by The Daily Pennsylvanian would comment on the planned changes, citing clauses in their contracts requiring confidentiality. While Skoufalos would not commit the University to either a set number of Spectaguards on patrol or a timetable for the transition from walking to cycling patrols, he emphasized that this new policy was not merely "experimental." "We're always looking to do things better," he said. "It's a calculated deployment strategy." He added that the bike patrols, expected to be unveiled before the fall, would replace many -- but not all -- of the walking patrols in a "seamless process." Rubin said that the acquisition of new bicycles and officer uniforms are the only logistical details standing in the way of an imminent deployment of the new bike patrols. "Bikes are a sort of a growing trend in security work," he added, citing examples such as suburban shopping malls and the campuses of Drexel and Temple universities. "The bike patrols will create greater visibility and effectiveness."

Comments powered by Disqus

Please note All comments are eligible for publication in The Daily Pennsylvanian.