St. Mary's
Timely Warning Notifications (Clery Act)
St. Mary's University Police Department maintains two paired, standalone Policy Library entries, Timely Warning Notifications (Clery Act) and Immediate (Emergency) Notifications (Clery Act), that spell out a draft-review-send workflow routing every proposed timely warning through the Office of Communications before University Police sends it as a Crime Alert.
Read the official policyInstitution
St. Mary's University
Private Masters · TX
~3,758 studentsStMU Alerts
In the policy’s own words
What the policy says
Draft-review-send production pipelinereconstructed
University Police will draft an email containing the proposed timely warning notification and forward it to the Office of Communications, which will review and suggest revisions, then send it back to the University Police Department for a final review.
- — Documents a specific three-step draft, review, and final-review sequence between University Police and the Office of Communications rather than a single-office sign-off.
Sexual assault and the limits of timelinessreconstructed
In cases involving sexual assault, they are often reported long after the incident occurred, thus there is no ability to distribute a 'timely' warning notice to the community. All cases of sexual assault, including stranger and non-stranger/acquaintance cases, will be assessed for potential issuance of a Timely Warning Notice.
- — An unusually direct acknowledgment that reporting delays common in sexual assault cases can defeat the purpose of a 'timely' warning, while still committing to assess every case for issuance.
More likely than not confirmation standardreconstructed
St. Mary's University Police will confirm that there is an emergency or dangerous situation that poses an immediate threat to the health or safety of some or all members of the St. Mary's University Community, using the determination of 'more likely than not' to confirm an immediate threat.
- — Names a specific evidentiary threshold, 'more likely than not,' for the emergency-notification confirmation decision, more precise than the undefined 'confirmed' standard many institutions publish.
At a glance
How this policy works
- When it activates
- A Timely Warning (Crime Alert) is considered whenever a Clery-reportable crime against a person occurs within the university's Clery geography and is determined to pose an ongoing or serious threat. An Immediate (Emergency) Notification is issued once University Police confirms, using a 'more likely than not' standard, that an emergency or dangerous situation poses an immediate threat to health or safety.
- Who decides
- St. Mary's University Police Department and/or University Communications hold authority to develop and distribute a Timely Warning. University Police drafts the notice; the Office of Communications reviews and suggests revisions; University Police performs a final review before sending. University Police alone makes the 'more likely than not' confirmation for Immediate (Emergency) Notifications.
- Timeliness standard
- A fixed minutes-based standard was not reproduced verbatim in the sources reviewed. The Timely Warning document acknowledges its own limit directly: sexual assault cases are often reported long after the incident occurred, so there is no ability to distribute a warning that is actually 'timely' in those cases, even though the university still assesses them for issuance.
- Emergency notification vs. timely warning
- The two documents split the federal two-track requirement into two separate Policy Library entries with different decision standards: Timely Warning Notifications runs a draft-review-send pipeline through Communications, while Immediate (Emergency) Notifications relies on University Police's own 'more likely than not' confirmation and is sent directly by email and StMU Alert text.
- Scope & limits
- Timely Warning distribution covers all current St. Mary's students and employees; geography follows the Clery definition of on-campus property, public property within or immediately adjacent to campus, and non-campus property the university owns or controls. Sexual assault cases are explicitly flagged as a category where the timeliness goal is frequently unattainable given typical reporting delays.
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Analysis
Reading the policy
St. Mary's University, a Marianist Catholic institution in San Antonio, Texas founded in 1852, publishes its Clery notification procedures as two separate, numbered entries in its official Policy Library rather than folding them into the Annual Security Report or a general emergency plan: Timely Warning Notifications (Clery Act) and Immediate (Emergency) Notifications (Clery Act).
The Timely Warning document, styled internally as a Crime Alert, sets out a specific production pipeline rather than just a criteria statement: University Police will draft an email containing the proposed timely warning notification and forward it to the Office of Communications, which will review and suggest revisions, then send it back to the University Police Department for a final review before the notification goes out to all current students and employees. St. Mary's University Police Department and/or University Communications hold the authority to develop and distribute the notice.
The companion Immediate (Emergency) Notifications document uses a distinct evidentiary standard for confirming a threat: University Police will confirm that there is an emergency or dangerous situation using the determination of 'more likely than not,' language more specific than the vague 'confirmed' standard many institutions' pages use without defining it. Once confirmed, the notice goes to the community by email and a StMU Alert text message. The Timely Warning document separately singles out sexual assault as a case where the usual production pipeline often cannot produce a genuinely timely notice, because such cases are frequently reported long after the incident occurred, leaving no ability to distribute a warning that is actually timely, even though the case is still assessed for issuance.
Because stmarytx.edu returns HTTP 403 to automated fetching in this environment, the passages above are reconstructed from search-engine-indexed extracts of the two Policy Library pages rather than a firsthand line-by-line read, so every excerpt below is marked isVerbatimConfirmed: false out of caution even though the underlying search results present them as close quotations. Confidence is set to medium on that basis.
Takeaways
Key findings
St. Mary's splits its Clery notification duties into two separate, numbered Policy Library entries rather than one combined document, each with its own decision standard.
Timely Warnings pass through a documented three-step pipeline: University Police drafts, the Office of Communications reviews and suggests revisions, and University Police performs a final review before sending.
Immediate (Emergency) Notifications use a named evidentiary standard, 'more likely than not,' for University Police's confirmation decision, more specific than most institutions' undefined 'confirmed' language.
The Timely Warning document explicitly acknowledges that sexual assault cases are frequently reported long after the fact, undermining true timeliness, while still committing every such case to individual assessment.
Provenance
Sources
- Official
- Official
Tags
policysoptimely-warningemergency-notificationclery-actstmu-alertsprivate-masterstexas
Added 2026-07-03Updated 2026-07-03Via ingestion