Emergency Sign

Emergency Response Guide

Emergency Information

The is the first contact and first responder for all campus emergencies. To reach Campus Safety, dial 7911 from any campus telephone 24 hours a day. Do not first dial "8" for an outside line. Dial 610-526-7911 from off-campus or cellular phone.

General Emergency Response

Please take time to familiarize yourself with the following information. It is intended to explain our safety and communication systems and to help you respond to an on-campus emergency. Circumstances of specific emergencies vary, and case-by-case judgment is always required.

  • Give your name (confidentiality will be respected). 
  • Give your extension. 
  • Give the building name and room number or other specific location. 
  • Describe the condition clearly and accurately. 
  • Don't hang up! You may be an important link in an emergency. Other information may be needed, and special instructions may be provided. Let the person you are talking to end the conversation.
  • In an emergency or severe weather event, information will be posted on the College's emergency message hotline, 610-526-7310, to keep you updated about the impact on the community and to announce any closures or cancellations. Please call this number before calling the Campus Safety dispatcher if you seek information.
  • The College may also use broadcast emails, text messages, and/or telephone calls to inform and update the on-campus community.
  • In the case of an urgent or extreme emergency, the College will also activate an outdoor public address system to distribute an alert signal and voice message.
  • It is important to check your voicemail, texts, and email regularly during an emergency for possible updates. In case of an extended or severe emergency, information will also be posted on the College's website, .
  • Fire alarms will be used to sound a building evacuation. 
  • Exit via stairways. Do not use elevators. You may be trapped or let out into a danger area.
  • Seek out and give assistance to any disabled persons in the area, if you can do so safely. If you cannot assist, alert emergency responders to the situation. 
  • Follow instructions of Campus Safety Officers or other properly identified emergency personnel. 
  • If time permits:
    • Turn off electrical appliances.
    • Close room doors behind you.
    • Bring your keys with you. 
  • Go to an open outside area, away from the building. Gather with other people leaving the building, keeping paths clear for emergency vehicles. Remain with the group so that occupants can be accounted for. 
  • Wait for instructions from emergency personnel. Do not re-enter the building until Campus Safety Officers allow you to do so.

Safety Tip: In emergencies, people tend to try to exit buildings by the same route they entered, even when that exit is blocked. Learn the alternate exit routes from buildings you regularly occupy.

People with disabilities are advised to be prepared for emergencies. Locate and remember important areas in buildings you frequent including exits, exit routes, areas of rescue assistance, stairways, elevators and telephones. Individuals who will need assistance leaving a building during an emergency are advised to identify in advance someone nearby who can assist you. You should discuss with that person a plan for leaving the building and/or informing emergency personnel of your presence and location so that assistance can be provided.

Resident students are urged to contact the Director of Access Services at 610-526-7351 each semester and request that Campus Safety be informed about your identity and campus residence so assistance can be provided should an emergency occur. You should also inform Residential Life staff in advance about your need for assistance in the event of an emergency in the dormitory. If you need assistance to evacuate, you should identify two individuals (e.g., one Hall Advisor and one student) on your hall beforehand who can assist you and who will inform emergency personnel of your presence in the hall. Discuss with these individuals in advance the specific nature of the assistance you may need.

Employees are also encouraged to contact the Director of Access Services at the above number to identify any particular needs and to request that Campus Safety be informed about your identity and regular work location(s) should emergency assistance be needed.

During an emergency, people with conditions affecting their ability to evacuate a building should take the following steps:

  • If a campus phone is available, dial 7911 for Campus Safety and state your location and situation. If using a cellular phone, dial 610-526-7911 (x7911 from Campus phones) to reach Campus Safety. 
  • Do not use elevators, which may shut down in emergency situations. Rescue personnel will determine whether circumstances warrant the evacuation of a person who is nonambulatory. 
  • Ask for assistance to exit the building, if possible, or to go to one of the following locations: the designated Area of Rescue Assistance, the nearest stairwell with doors that separate the stairs from the hall, or a room with a door and exterior window near a stairway. 
  • Note the room number or other identifying features of your location. Ask someone leaving the building to notify emergency personnel of your location and situation.

Severe weather, such as a tornado (rare, but occasionally occurs in this area), or other emergencies may require seeking shelter within buildings.

If conditions indicate or if you are instructed to do so:

  • Seek shelter in the lowest levels of buildings or an interior hallway, remaining clear of exterior windows and doors. 
  • Keep away from overhead fixtures, filing cabinets, and bookshelves.
  • Exit auditoriums, gymnasiums, and other rooms with wide free-span roofs and seek shelter elsewhere in the building. 
  • In general, do not leave the building until instructed to do so by emergency personnel. 
  • Upon leaving a building, be alert for debris, power lines, gas leaks and other safety hazards.

Fire Response

Heat and toxic smoke from fire build up with surprising speed, quickly blocking escape paths. Few people are burned to death in fires; most die from smoke inhalation. Taking fire alarms seriously and exiting buildings quickly are essential to your survival.

There is no such thing as a fireproof building. Buildings made of stone or concrete present a risk when their contents burn.

For information on fires in science laboratories, please refer to the ÀÏÍõÂÛ̳ Laboratory Emergency Guide, available in the science departments.

  • Leave the room and close the door behind you to keep smoke and flames out of the hall. 
  • Sound the fire alarm by activating the nearest pull station, and leave the building by the closest exit. (Note: In residence halls, pull the alarm to alert others even if there is an individual smoke detector in the room, as the closed door will delay activation of the central alarm.) 
  • Call Campus Safety at 610-526-7911 (x7911 from Campus phones) from a safe location.
  • Immediately stop what you are doing, turn off any cooking or other hazardous equipment, and leave the building through the nearest exit.
  • Close room doors behind you.
  • Remember that in nearly every commercial building, there are at least two pathways to an exit, should your regular path be blocked.

  • Do not use the elevator. You could be trapped or let out into a fire area. 

Safety Tip: The rule children are taught about crawling under smoke really works. If smoke blocks your path, there is often cleaner, cooler air nearer the floor level. Don't stand. Smoke and deadly gases rise.

This is the choice of last resort. Make every effort to leave the building as soon as you hear/see an alarm or other evidence of fire.

  • Let someone know you are in the room. If the phone works, call Campus Safety at 610-526-7911 (x7911 from Campus phones). 
  • If your window can be opened, hang a bedsheet or similar item out the window to signal the fire department, but close the window against smoke if necessary. 
  • Seal openings around hallway doors with cloth items (towels or sheets if available). If there is a source of water, keep towels and door wet.

Smoke detectors and pull stations are subject to false alarms such as overcooked popcorn in a microwave oven or a deliberate pull station activation. Unless Campus Safety has some evidence that a fire actually exists, they must dispatch an officer to the building to determine whether an alarm represents an emergency before calling the fire department.

Although Campus Safety will respond to any alarm as quickly as possible, to speed the arrival of fire trucks, call Campus Safety at 610-526-7911 (from a safe location) and tell them you see fire or smoke. They will immediately summon the fire department and direct them to the location.

Safety Tip: When a fire occurs in a large building, valuable response time can be lost because everyone evacuating may assume that someone else called in the fire. Upon exiting a building in a fire emergency, call Campus Safety unless you know that the call was already made.

Fight a fire only if it is small, and you believe you can put it out without risking your safety.

If the fire is small and:

  • an extinguisher is readily available, 
  • you are familiar with its operation, 
  • you can fight the fire without blocking your exit path 
  • the extinguisher is compatible with what's burning (e.g., flammable liquids or live electric equipment, see below)

Then attempt to extinguish the fire.

Generally, extinguishers are placed so that you must leave the immediate fire area, then decide whether it is safe to go back to fight the fire.

As a rule of thumb, an unconfined, small fire will render a typically furnished room intolerable to enter in about 30 seconds. Do not re-enter a room that is smoke-filled.

Safety Tip: The first priority in responding to a fire is preservation of life. No one is obliged to fight a fire.

  • Remove the fire extinguisher from its supporting bracket or cabinet carefully; extinguishers are surprisingly heavy. The lower handle on the valve will support the extinguisher when carried. 
  • Remove the pin from the handle by pulling the ring, breaking the plastic tamper-evident seal. 
  • Aim the nozzle at the base of the flames, squeeze the handles together, and sweep the nozzle slowly from side to side, across the width of the flames until the fire is extinguished or the extinguisher is empty. You may repeatedly start and stop the flow of the extinguisher by squeezing and releasing the top handle. 
  • Start well back from the fire, walking into the "throw range" of the extinguisher. (See below). 
  • If a fire is not successfully controlled with one extinguisher, you should leave immediately.

Call Campus Safety, even if you successfully extinguish the fire.

Once the pin has been removed from a fire extinguisher, the extinguisher must be replaced, even if the extinguisher wasn't used. Call Campus Safety for immediate replacement at 610-526-7911 (x7911 from Campus phones).

Multipurpose dry chemical extinguishers (usually red) are safe and effective against all ordinary types of fires). The extinguishing agent, a fine powder, will travel about 10 feet when discharged

Pressurized water extinguishers (shiny stainless steel) are effective only against ordinary combustibles, such as paper, wood, fabric, trash, etc. They must never be used on flammable liquid/oil fires or fires involving live electrical circuits. Pressurized water units will propel a water stream about 25 to 30 feet.

Carbon dioxide extinguishers (red, cone-shaped black nozzle, no pressure gauge) work only against flammable liquid fires and are safe to use around live electrical circuits. They will not extinguish fires involving ordinary combustibles and must be discharged within about 3 feet of flames to be effective. They are rarely found outside of laboratory buildings.

Safety Tip: Learn the location and types of extinguishers in your building.

"Stop, Drop and Roll":

  • You must immediately get the person flat on the ground. Do not allow the person to run. 
  • Extinguish the flames by rolling the person on the ground. A jacket or blanket may be used to help smother the flames if immediately available. 
  • Seconds count. Do not waste time looking for an extinguisher or water source.
  • Douse the person with water as soon thereafter as possible. Do not attempt to remove burned clothing. 
  • Call Campus Safety at 610-526-7911 (x7911 from Campus phones). 

Fire evacuation alarms may be activated by smoke detectors, heat detectors, manual pull stations, or the flow of water through sprinkler heads. No matter what triggers the alarm, the fire bells, horns, and/or flashing strobes will look and sound the same within a particular building.

Smoke/heat detectors. Detectors respond quickly to low levels of combustion products and/or rapid temperature increases and offer critical evacuation time if you respond quickly to their alarms. In general, detectors in campus buildings sound the entire building's evacuation alarms and alert Campus Safety via a central alarm system wired to each building.

Special case — residence halls. Smoke detectors inside individual sleeping rooms operate independently of the central building system. The central system has detectors in hallways and common areas. When any of these detectors is activated, the evacuation alarms sound throughout the building, and Campus Safety is alerted. The smoke detectors in individual rooms sound only at the detector to notify a sleeping occupant of fire smoke within that room. They do not alert Campus Safety. If a fire should occur within your room, it is essential to manually activate a pull station to warn others as quickly as possible.

Sprinklered Buildings. Sprinkler heads are activated by heat (about 170° F), and only the heated sprinkler heads open. Sprinklers are very effective in containing fires, but they do not prevent the spread of dangerous smoke, so rapid evacuation of sprinklered buildings remains essential. The flow of water through a sprinkler system will activate building evacuation alarms and alert Campus Safety.

The following buildings are fully sprinklered:

  • Batten House
  • Benham Gateway
  • Bettws-y-Coed
  • Brecon
  • Cambrian Row
  • Campus Center
  • Carpenter Library
  • Child Study Institute (Little West House) 
  • Dalton 
  • Denbigh 
  • Enid Cook ’31 Center
  • Guild
  • Human Resources
  • Merion
  • New Dorm 
  • Park Science Complex
  • Pembroke East, West and Arch
  • Radnor
  • Rhoads
  • Rockefeller
  • Old Library
  • Schwartz Gym
  • Ward

Pull Stations: Manual pull stations in buildings activate the building evacuation alarms and alert Campus Safety when activated. Pull stations should be tripped if a fire is observed or strongly suspected. Take a moment to identify and learn how to operate the pull stations in your building.

  • Self-closing doors need to close. Do not block open doors to stairwells or doors that divide long hallways. Closed fire doors significantly slow the spread of smoke. 
  • Self-closing doors equipped with magnetic door holders may be left open. The magnets will release, allowing the doors to close, when the fire evacuation alarm is activated. Do not let objects block the swing path of doors with magnetic catches. 
  • Don't overload outlets with multiple outlet cords or plugs. If additional outlets are required, use a UL-approved multi-outlet "power strip" with its own built-in circuit breaker. 
  • Careless smoking, use of candles, and unattended cooking appliances remain major causes of fatal fires in residential buildings. Smoking and the use of candles, incense, or open flames of any kind are prohibited in all College buildings.
  • Keep walkways, stairwells and exits free from obstructions at all times. 
  • Report non-illuminated exit signs, damaged fire equipment and other fire hazards to Campus Safety.

Other Emergencies

Immediately call Campus Safety at 610-526-7911 (x7911 from Campus phones).

Note any medical alert information that may be present on jewelry, and report it to the dispatcher.

Do not move an injured person unless absolutely necessary.

Stay with the victim and assist as necessary until help arrives.

Note: Work-related injuries or illnesses must be reported to the employee's supervisor and the Environmental Health & Safety Office as soon as possible.

Report hazardous material/chemical spills or releases to Campus Safety. Try to describe the conditions and identify the material to the dispatcher.

For spills in laboratories, refer to the ÀÏÍõÂÛ̳ Laboratory Emergency Guide for additional instructions.

Elsewhere, do not attempt to clean up spills of materials you believe to be hazardous.

Indoors: Close doors to the spill area and turn off sources of ignition. Leave the area immediately and call Campus Safety.

Outdoors: If a vehicle leaks fuel, turn off the engine and direct other vehicles away from the spill area because vehicle engines may be a source of ignition. Stay upwind of any outdoor spill or release to the air. Call Campus Safety.

Eye or skin contact: If a hazardous material spills/splashes on skin or eyes, flush the affected area immediately with running water. Have someone call Campus Safety. Continue rinsing the skin or eyes until help arrives.

Contact Campus Safety if the outage presents an emergency requiring immediate response. Call x7310 for updates as to when power is expected to be restored.

Turn off appliances and computer equipment to prevent damage by voltage spikes or surges that may occur when power is restored.

Candles, lighters, and other open-flame devices should never be used during a power failure. Keep a flashlight in a convenient location.

If people are stuck in an elevator, tell them you will get help, contact Campus Safety at 610-526-7911 (x7911 from Campus phones), and stay with them until help arrives.

Extinguish open flames, turn off appliances, open windows and leave the area. Call Campus Safety at 610-526-7911 (x7911 from Campus phones) from a safe location.

The topography of the campus is such that flooding of buildings is much more likely to occur due to plumbing or drainage system failures than from rising surface waters.

If you observe standing or flowing water in a building, notify Campus Safety at 610-526-7911 (x7911 from Campus phones). Avoid all contact with the water because it presents a serious risk of electric shock and may be contaminated.

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Contact Us

Campus Safety Department

John Maloney Memorial Building
Phone: (610) 526-7911

Lil Burroughs
Bi-Co Executive Director, Campus Safety
Phone: (610) 526-7911