TSU
Emergency Notifications and Timely Warnings (Department of Public Safety / Annual Security Report)
Texas Southern University, a public HBCU in Houston, issues two distinct Clery notifications through its Department of Public Safety: broad emergency notifications for significant emergencies or dangerous situations involving an immediate threat to health or safety, and narrower timely warnings (branded 'Tiger Alert') for Clery Act crimes that pose a serious or ongoing threat. Both are delivered primarily through the LiveSafe mobile app, which campus members must download and on which they must select Texas Southern University to receive alerts.
Read the official policyInstitution
Texas Southern University
Hbcu · TX
~9,000 studentsTiger Alert / LiveSafe
In the policy’s own words
What the policy says
Emergency notification definitionverbatim
Emergency notifications are alerts issued by the Department of Public Safety to inform the campus community about significant emergencies or dangerous situations involving an immediate threat to their health or safety.
- — Sets the emergency-notification threshold at an 'immediate threat to health or safety.' Identical wording appeared across multiple official TSU-page retrievals (the Emergency Preparedness page and Public Safety index).
Timely warning definition (Tiger Alert)verbatim
Timely warnings are notifications issued at the discretion of the TSU Department of Public Safety to alert the campus community about Clery Act crimes that have occurred and pose a serious or ongoing threat to students and employees.
- — Limits timely warnings to Clery Act crimes posing a serious or ongoing threat and makes issuance discretionary to DPS. Identical wording surfaced across the Crime Awareness page and its mirrored copies; TSU lists a most-recent update of October 14, 2025.
LiveSafe app enrollment requirementverbatim
Students, parents, employees, and community members must download the LiveSafe app and select Texas Southern University as your institution to receive emergency notifications issued by TSU Department of Public Safety.
- — Establishes that TSU's emergency-notification reach is opt-in via the LiveSafe app rather than automatic enrollment — a meaningful coverage limitation. Identical wording appeared across multiple official TSU retrievals.
Timely warnings exclude the victim's namereconstructed
Timely Warnings and Campus Crime Alerts will not include the name of the victim(s).
- — Privacy guardrail consistent with Clery practice. Surfaced via the search index; the ASR PDF returned HTTP 403 to automated fetching, so the surrounding context could not be byte-for-byte confirmed and is marked isVerbatimConfirmed:false.
Blue-light emergency phones supplementreconstructed
Emergency blue light phones provide a direct and immediate line to University Police, ensuring rapid response in urgent situations.
- — Describes the fixed-location supplemental channel. Surfaced via the search index rather than a confirmed live fetch (tsu.edu returned HTTP 403), so marked isVerbatimConfirmed:false out of caution.
At a glance
How this policy works
- When it activates
- Emergency notifications are issued for significant emergencies or dangerous situations involving an immediate threat to the health or safety of the campus community — broader than Clery crimes. Timely warnings (Tiger Alert) are issued, at the discretion of TSU DPS, for Clery Act crimes occurring within Clery geography that pose a serious or ongoing threat to students and employees.
- Who decides
- The TSU Department of Public Safety (DPS) issues both emergency notifications and timely warnings; timely warnings are described as issued 'at the discretion of the TSU Department of Public Safety.' The specific position authorized to confirm and trigger an emergency notification was not confirmed verbatim in this review (tsu.edu and the ASR PDF blocked automated fetching).
- Timeliness standard
- TSU frames emergency notifications around the Clery standard of prompt notification upon confirmation of a significant emergency or dangerous situation so individuals can take protective action; timely warnings are issued to aid prevention of similar crimes. The exact 'without delay / upon confirmation' wording in TSU's ASR was not byte-for-byte confirmable here.
- Emergency notification vs. timely warning
- TSU explicitly separates the two Clery functions: emergency notifications (broad — any immediate threat to health or safety, not limited to Clery crimes) and timely warnings / campus crime alerts (limited to Clery Act crimes representing a serious or ongoing threat). TSU publishes an Annual Security Report and notes timely warnings will not include the victim's name.
- Testing cadence
- Not confirmed verbatim in this review. TSU documents emergency-preparedness drills (including active-shooter/active-attack exercises) through TSU Police, but the precise published periodic test cadence for the LiveSafe/Tiger Alert notification system was not confirmable (tsu.edu and ASR PDF blocked automated fetching).
- Scope & limits
- Reach depends on individuals downloading the LiveSafe app and selecting Texas Southern University as their institution — there is no described automatic-enrollment guarantee, making coverage opt-in. Blue-light emergency phones across campus provide a supplemental, location-fixed channel to reach University Police.
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Analysis
Reading the policy
Texas Southern University (TSU) is one of the largest historically Black universities in Texas, located in Houston's Third Ward. Its emergency-communication program is run by the TSU Department of Public Safety and is organized around the Clery Act's two-track model: emergency notifications and timely warnings. TSU explains that 'Emergency notifications are alerts issued by the Department of Public Safety to inform the campus community about significant emergencies or dangerous situations involving an immediate threat to their health or safety,' and that these notifications are deliberately broader than timely warnings because they 'can encompass a wide range of threats beyond Clery Act crimes.'
The distinguishing feature of TSU's model is that the primary delivery channel is an app rather than an auto-enrolled mass-notification database. TSU's Emergency Preparedness page states that 'Students, parents, employees, and community members must download the LiveSafe app and select Texas Southern University as your institution to receive emergency notifications issued by TSU Department of Public Safety.' This is a notable scope limit: unlike systems that automatically enroll every student and employee, TSU's reach depends on individuals actively installing LiveSafe and choosing TSU. LiveSafe doubles as a reporting and two-way-communication tool (incident reporting, real-time location, direct contact with campus police), and TSU supplements it with blue-light emergency phones placed across campus that provide a 'direct and immediate line to University Police.' The historical 'Tiger Alert' brand appears on TSU Police timely-warning and campus-update messaging.
For timely warnings, TSU's Crime Awareness page states that 'Timely warnings are notifications issued at the discretion of the TSU Department of Public Safety to alert the campus community about Clery Act crimes that have occurred and pose a serious or ongoing threat to students and employees.' TSU lays out the standard Clery geography and reporting criteria (the crime must occur within Clery geography, be reported to a campus security authority or police, and be judged a serious or continuing threat) and specifies the content a warning should carry — nature of the crime; date, time and location; a suspect description if available; and protective actions — while noting that 'Timely Warnings and Campus Crime Alerts will not include the name of the victim(s).' TSU also publishes a 2025 Annual Security Report documenting these procedures and reminding the community of its annual obligation to report dangerous situations to DPS.
The exact named decision authority (specific position authorized to confirm and trigger an emergency notification) and any precise published periodic test cadence were not byte-for-byte confirmable here because tsu.edu hosts and the ASR PDF return HTTP 403 to automated fetching; those fields draw on indexed snippets of the official pages and ASR and are flagged where reconstructed. The two core definitions (emergency notification and timely warning) and the LiveSafe-enrollment sentence appeared with identical wording across multiple independent retrievals from official TSU pages and are marked verbatim-confirmed.
Takeaways
Key findings
TSU's confirmed alert brand is 'Tiger Alert,' but emergency notifications are delivered primarily through the LiveSafe mobile app (the prompt's guessed 'TSU Alert' is not the actual brand).
Reach is opt-in: community members 'must download the LiveSafe app and select Texas Southern University' — there is no described automatic-enrollment guarantee, unlike most mass-notification systems.
TSU keeps Clery functions distinct: broad emergency notifications (any immediate threat to health/safety) vs. timely warnings/campus crime alerts (limited to Clery Act crimes posing a serious or ongoing threat).
Blue-light emergency phones across campus provide a supplemental, location-fixed line to University Police.
The named decision authority and exact test cadence could not be confirmed verbatim (tsu.edu and ASR PDF blocked automated fetching); three excerpts were confirmed verbatim across multiple official-page retrievals.
Policy, meet practice
When this system actually fired
5 documented times TSU’s alert system was used, from the case archive.
Provenance
Sources
- Official
- Official
- Official
- Official
- Clery ASR
- Clery ASR
Tags
policyemergency-notificationtimely-warninghbcutexastiger-alertlivesafeopt-in
Added 2026-06-21Updated 2026-06-21Via ingestion