The University of Texas System was created in 1881 and consisted of two
institutions. The academic campus was located in Austin and the medical
campus was located in Galveston. These locations were selected by popular
vote of the citizens of the State.
UT-Austin first began using security guards in about 1947 when six were
hired, (in contrast, the Austin campus now has 66 commissioned peace
officers and 95 guards).
Our official creation as a police agency occurred in 1967 and was largely
a result of a sniping incident on August 1, 1966 on the UT-Austin campus.
At 12 noon, a student by the name of Charles Whitman took a position in
the UT-Austin Main Building Tower (277 feet high) and began shooting
people at random. When it was all over he had killed 17 people and
wounded 35 others.
During the 1967 session of the Texas Legislature, members of the House and
Senate in a near unanimous action answered a growing need on Texas college
campuses for adequate police protection by passing Senate Bill 162
(article 2919j, Vernon's Civil Statutes of Texas).
While Article 2919j contained several provisions relating to law
enforcement, the main provision which offered assistance to state college
and university campuses across Texas was the authorization of the
governing boards of the schools to commission certain security personnel
as peace officers. In Texas the term "peace officer" is the highest rank
in the law enforcement field and is distinguished from game wardens and
other titles which come under the heading of "law enforcement officers."
In the forefront of the new look for The University of Texas System
security force was Chancellor Harry Ransom. He took an organization plan
and recommended training program to the The University of Texas System
Board of Regents soon after Article 2919j was signed into law, and the
regents approved it unanimously.
In a predictable way Article 2919j was both a blessing and a problem for
many campuses. It was a blessing first because college campus populations
were, and are still today, growing by leaps and bounds; and more criminals
are being attracted to these areas in Texas. This is true not only in
schools in The University of Texas System, but at other institutions as
well.
However, on the other side, many faculty criticized Article 2919j from its
inception. Their main objection was not to the increased standards for
law enforcement on college campuses, but to the point that commissioned
officers would be carrying sidearms on campus. The faculty members joined
by some students told the Legislature and The University of Texas
administration that an academic campus was no place for a police officer
with a pistol or weapon of any kind.
It should be pointed out that these complaints soon disappeared as Article
2919j was implemented on campuses across the state. With the backing of
The University of Texas System Administration and Chancellor Harry Ransom,
the University of Texas System Officer of the Director of Police was
created; and, under the leadership of this office the University of Texas
System component institutions moved quietly and imaginatively into the
area of law enforcement.
The responsibilities of the position of UT System Director of Police in
1967 included the establishment of (1) qualifications for all commissioned
personnel, (2) organizational structure suitable for all institions in The
University of Texas System, (3) continuing training programs including
basic and in-service; for the System police oriented to an educational
community, (4) a uniform record system, and (5) a uniform reporting
procedure. Also, the Director (1) served as consultant to the Board of
Regents on police and security matters, (2) coordinated police programs
between institutions, and (3) conducted annual performance evaluations of
the various police departments.
The image of the "old campus cop" with a key chain and a flashlight soon
began disappearing. What had been portrayed as an elderly man shuffling
around the campus rousting students from parked cars became a young,
well-trained peace officer patrolling the campus on foot and in squad cars
offering everything from a jumper cable for dead batteries and crime
prevention programs to investigations of criminal activity for the
students, faculty, and staff.
When the first officers were commissioned in 1968 there were seven police
departments and only 22 commissioned officers. The University of Texas
System Police office adopted a motto of Protection, Courtesy, and
Service. Professionalism in law enforcement was and is constantly
emphasized.
One of thefirst steps taken by the Director of Police was to survey each
campus as to its policing needs, past practices of the traffic and
security force, and the quality and ability of the security people already
on the individual component's payroll.
The System is currently comprised of 15 police departments throughout the
state totaling more than 300 commissioned peace officers and more than 650
non-commissioned guards.
The UT System has under it's jurisdiction more than 230,000 students,,
faculty, and staff; more than 8300 acres of property, and more than
44,788,875 square feet of building area. The largest institution in the
System is the UT-Austin campus with more than 70,000 students, faculty,
and staff.
The present Office of the Director of Police still provides support for
these component institution police departments in the form of training,
investigations and inspections, and in addition, manages the promotional
system, investigates complaints against officers, manages and coordinates
the computer network system between institution police departments and the
Director's office, and produces an annual report which reflects all
criminal activity as well as service performed at each component police
department. The System operates it's own police academy under the
direction of Director Roy Baldridge and generally holds two basic classes
a year consisting of more than 700 hours each as well as other in-service
training. There are four Inspectors on staff to assist in the training,
investigations, and inspections.