UPenn Home
About Public Safety
Mission Statement
DPS Leadership
Organization Chart
Partners in Safety & Security
Table Top, Field Exercises
& Special Training

Sustainability at DPS
University City Lighting
Safety Education Classes
DPS Collateral
About
Policing at Penn
Police Athletic League
Police Complaint Procedure
Table Top, Field Exercises
& Special Training

Crime Mapping and
Data Analysis

City, State & Federal
Partnerships

Diversity Initiatives
Property Registration
Sustainability
About
Emergency Preparedness
Emergency Drills
MERT
Fire Protection Reliability
Safety Education
& Presentations

Table Top, Field Exercises
& Special Training

City, State & Federal
Partnerships

About
24/7 Walking Escorts
Closed Circuit Television
Bluelight Emergency
Phones

PennTransit 8-RIDE Service
Residential Security
Public Safety Annex
About
Crime Mapping and
Data Analysis
About
Sensitive Crimes
Rape Aggression
Defense Classes

S.A.F.E. Courses
About PennReady
Automated External
Defibrillators

Blue Book
Crisis Management Plan

Emergency Team Members
Emergency Procedures
UPennAlert
Crime Reporting
Annual Security
& Fire Safety Report

Online 7-Day Crime Log
Commend a Police Officer
or Public Safety Officer

Silent Witness Form
Request for Special
Property Check

Police Complaint Form
Presentation Request Form
Feedback Form
Forms
Safety Tips
Everyday Safety
What to Do If?
RAD & S.A.F.E. Training
Diversity Initiatives
and Programs

Publications
Videos and Media
Penn Transit
Campus Links
Off-Campus Links
Emergency Contact
Numbers

Directory
Reporting Crime
South St. Bridge Questions
SSBridge Home Page
Detours Maps & Directions
Getting to Penn
FAQs

Fire & Emergency Services >>
Emergency Drills

FES leads the charge in designing and conducting emergency evacuation and shelter-in-place drills in all Penn residential buildings (5 times/year in 14 different residential buildings and 2 times/year in fraternities and sororities) and academic/administrative buildings (2 times/year in 180 different buildings).

Evacuation and shelter-in-place drills are scheduled throughout the year to ensure the readiness of the campus community in responding to any type of crisis that requires building occupants to evacuate a building or to seek protective shelter inside of a building. Evacuation and sheltering-in-place are the inverse of one another. You evacuate a building when the conditions inside the building present a hazard to human life, health or safety. If the conditions outside of a building presented a hazard to human life, health or safety, one would reverse the evacuation steps and shelter inside a building.

Emergency Evacuation Drills

Evacuation drills include alarm activation to ensure fire protection and reliability, along with an orderly, disciplined evacuation, followed by a thorough inspection of the building to immediately rectify any code related issues. Finally, an on-site discussion is held with students, staff and faculty to evaluate and improve, when necessary, the performance and efficacy of these drills.

Specifically, upon activation of a building fire alarm system, the evacuation drill is designed to reinforce the message of immediately moving "out and away" from a building to the predetermined Building Area of Refuge (BAR) so that an accountability process can begin for all occupants. Before and during an emergency evacuation drill, the building administrator, building emergency coordinator and alternate, emergency team leaders and emergency team members collaborate with each other as part of a building’s Penn Emergency Team (PET).

Shelter-in-Place Drills

Shelter-in-place drills are a tactical response to a possible chemical, biological, radiological, nuclear or natural disaster. They are designed to provide a place of refuge for people and to give them a level of physical, emotional and mental comfort. During a shelter-in-place drill, building occupants are directed to pre-designated "shelter areas" within a building.

The building administrator, building emergency coordinator and alternate, emergency team leaders, and emergency team members, similar to emergency evacuation drills, work as a team to assess the status of all building occupants and when necessary, relay emergency communications from the Division of Public Safety to the people sheltering.