Some University of Waterloo students still feel uneasy since 3 stabbed in classroom - Action News
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Some University of Waterloo students still feel uneasy since 3 stabbed in classroom

"I didn't expect Waterloo to havethat kind of violence. It's a pretty safe campus," says Shub Mano, among University of Waterloo students who say they're still feeling shaken after the June 28 stabbing incident in a gender studies classroom.

Student petition demands security upgrades after teacher, 2 students stabbed June 28 in class

closeups of four people
Ria Gupta, Caleb Williams, Maya Wei and Shub Mano, left to right, are students at the University of Waterloo, where a stabbing incident June 28 is still causing concern. (Aastha Shetty/CBC)

Some University of Waterloo students say they're still feeling shaken after theJune 28 stabbings of three people at the southern Ontario school.

Soon after the attack inside a gender studies classroom that sent a teacher and two students to hospital, Waterloo Regional Police said they believe it was hate motivated. A 24-year-old recent graduate faces 10 charges, including aggravated assault.

The incident still has some, like engineering studentShub Mano, feeling shocked.

"It's been kind of surreal that thewhole thing even happened on Waterloo [campus]," he said. "I didn't expect Waterloo to havethat kind of violence. It's a pretty safe campus."

Psychology student Ria Gupta said the incident has givenher nightmares.

"[The university]should tell us what they've done,what steps they've taken to further secure the campus," she said. "Like, what have you done after the incident that makes me feel like I want to go to university again. I don't feel like stepping foot into the campus."

She said she now tries to avoid walkingaround campus alone because she feels vulnerable as a woman.

Gupta said she also feels nervous going into the Hagey Hall building to attend class in a room located right next towhere the stabbings happened.

Caleb Williams is a physics and engineering exchange student from Chicago.

Williams wentto a high school equipped with a metal detector at all entrances. He said it's not the right solution for the University of Waterloo.

"In one sense, it prevents people who want to do something bad from doing it.But at the same time, is that really solving the root cause? That might be putting a Band-Aid over a gaping wound."

Students asking university to do more

A group of studentshavestarted an online petition demanding a variety of security upgrades, including an emergency alert system that can send out text messages and robocalls to students on campus.

The petition, whichhad167 signatures by Monday, also suggestedinstalling a campus siren to alert students during emergencies.

A day after the attack, university officials said the in-house emergency alert system called WatSAFE didn't work as expected after the stabbings.

Rebecca Elming, a university spokesperson,confirmedthe app sent an alert to students 90 minutes after the incident.

In response to the petition, the University of Waterloo sent CBC News a statementsaying it has "taken steps to address the delay in the use of the WatSAFE app and is exploring other options for our emergency response system in the long term".

Community forums to hear concerns

Mano said he hopes the university learns from its mistakes.

"Information wasn't provided till like hours after the incident," he said, thinking about the confusion many students may have felt hours after the incident first happened.

"Now I understand that they don't want tofear monger ... [but]it'd be nice ifthere were more clear instructions ... A lot of people learned [about the emergency] through their professorsorthrough class announcements, which shouldn't be the way thatinformation like that should be distributed."

Engineering student Maya Wei hopes the university will find ways to support students who are still feeling uneasy.

"We got a lot of announcements saying that they were going to be like rallies andgatherings. I feel like that doesn't really do anything for me," she said. "It's not really like a solid action."

The university willhost two community forumson July 17 to hear from staff and students about their concerns and look for ways to "make campus safer and more inclusive, promote well-beingand move forward together."