The shooting incident at Illinois State University’s Bone Student Center Sunday night left students reflecting on campus safety and protocols.
Although the investigation is ongoing, freshman nutrition and dietetics major Ave Beatty thought the ISU Police Department (ISUPD) handled the situation well.
“As far as the response from the University police, I think they did a really good job with responding to [the shooting] quickly,” Beatty said.
Stephany Ortiz, a freshman Spanish education major, also felt the police responded well, but is concerned that the person of interest is not in custody.
“There were, like, 13 police cars out there, which is more than [usual], but I find it odd that they haven’t found whoever did it yet,” Ortiz said.
Ortiz was not the only student worried about the police looking for the person of interest. Junior marketing major Owen Reeter believes classes should have been canceled on Monday.
“I don’t think [the University] has done the best job, especially since [ISUPD] haven’t caught the guy yet, and we’re still in classes, I think it’s kind of crazy,” Reeter said.
Some students were concerned about the emergency alerts they received while the incident occurred.
“I think as far as getting information out at the time of it, they could’ve done better, but also at the same time, I don’t think they knew much,” Beatty said.
ISU Chief of Police Aaron Woodruff discussed the difficulties in relaying information during the incident.
“The challenge in any type of situation like this is how quickly we can get that information out while still being able to respond and deal with what’s happening on the ground there and actually collect the information from people present,” Woodruff said.
ISU President Aondover Tarhule sent an email to students on Monday morning regarding the incident. Junior organizational communications and leadership major Frankie Garcia believes Tarhule should do more to support students at this time.
“I feel like he did the minimum. All he did was send out an email, and it was the next day,” Garcia said.
Ortiz also felt Tarhule’s message was ineffective.
“It was too late, and I feel like it was just summarizing the alerts we already received last night,” Ortiz said. “Everything he said was already something we got in real time.”
With the incident occurring at the Bone, Reeter said its close proximity makes students feel unsafe on campus.
“I know this isn’t the first shooting we’ve had either, so it’s definitely in the back of people’s minds,” Reeter said. “What they could do is just add a little security on campus. We obviously are never expecting that to happen here, but it happened.”
Freshman music education major Campbell Manning said that while the shooting was an isolated incident, it still instills fear.
“I definitely think that they should make more strong regulations on it; it makes me a little more nervous because this is supposed to be a safe place,” Manning said.
Walk-in counseling services are available to students at the Student Services Building. Students can also call 309-438-3655 for immediate support.
“It’s unfortunate that we have to go through this in our schools,” Beatty said. “If anyone needs help, reach out to people, get counseling.”