Building Healthy Campus Relationships
At Western New England University, we are committed to fostering a safe, supportive, and inclusive campus environment. Through awareness, education, and advocacy, we strive to empower individuals to recognize, address, and prevent Domestic Violence, Sexual Assault, and Stalking (DVSAS).
The mission of Safe Connect—Building Healthy Campus Relationships—is to promote a culture of respect, safety, and accountability, ensuring that all members of our community have the knowledge and resources to combat these issues and support survivors. Together, we aim to build a campus where everyone can live, learn, and thrive free from violence and fear.
Who We Are
Safe Connect is a campus-wide initiative dedicated to preventing and responding to domestic violence, dating violence, sexual assault, and stalking. Our work is supported through a Department of Justice Campus Grant and focuses on creating a safer, more informed, and more supportive campus community.
We are a collaborative team made up of multidisciplinary departments across campus. Together, we work to strengthen prevention education, improve response systems, and build meaningful partnerships with community advocacy organizations.
While we work closely with many campus offices, Safe Connect is not an emergency response team and does not provide direct crisis services. Instead, we help connect students, faculty, and staff to appropriate resources and support systems both on and off campus.
At its core, Safe Connect exists to promote safety, respect, accountability, and care within our campus community.
Safe Connect focuses on prevention, awareness, training, and coordinated response efforts. We are committed to empowering students with knowledge about consent, healthy relationships, bystander intervention, and available support resources. Our goal is to make sure every student knows where to turn, understands their options, and feels supported.
How and When to Report
If you experience domestic violence, sexual assault, or stalking, you have several options for reporting and getting support. You can report to University Police, the Springfield Police Department, the Title IX Coordinator, a Deputy Coordinator, the Dean of Students, or another trusted faculty or staff member, who will then connect the report to the appropriate office. You may choose to report to Campus Public Safety without pursuing criminal charges, and the report will still be forwarded to the Title IX Coordinator for review and possible action. You also have the option to pursue both the University process and the criminal process at the same time. If you prefer, you may make an anonymous or confidential report; however, the University’s ability to fully respond may be limited without identifying information. In emergencies or life-threatening situations, call 911 immediately.
The University is committed to protecting the privacy of those involved and only shares information with individuals who need to know in order to provide support, assess the report, and address the situation. Confidential campus resources, including counseling and health services staff and the Safe Connect Project Director, are available for students who would like to speak with someone privately before deciding what steps to take.