Texas Campus Safety Legislation
Texas Campus Safety Act (SB 212)
Requires employees to report sexual assault, creates criminal penalties for failure to report, mandates annual campus safety training, and establishes confidential reporting mechanisms.
Texas's campus safety legislation is classified as comprehensive coverage. The governing statute is Texas Campus Safety Act (SB 212). The law was enacted in 2019, making it 7 years old — a meaningful signal about whether provisions reflect recent campus safety evolution (Title IX reforms, sexual assault prevention requirements, threat assessment mandates) or predate them. The statute applies alongside federal Clery Act rules to 374 higher education institutions in Texas serving approximately 1,631,376 enrolled students.
The regulated population splits into 102 public institutions and 272 private (nonprofit or for-profit) institutions, a relevant distinction because some state campus-safety statutes carry different enforcement mechanisms for public universities (direct legislative oversight) versus private colleges (accreditation-linked compliance). The statewide average safety score across reporting institutions stands at 3.95 on-campus incidents per 1,000 enrolled students. Texas ranks #50 nationally for campus safety outcomes. Reading the statute in isolation misses the bigger picture — effective campus safety depends equally on the legal framework, institutional investment in prevention programs, and campus reporting culture.
Comprehensive state legislation typically requires institutions to maintain threat assessment teams, conduct periodic campus climate surveys, provide mandatory sexual assault prevention education, coordinate directly with local law enforcement, and publish detailed annual safety reports beyond what federal Clery Act rules demand. Prospective students and parents evaluating schools in Texas can expect a higher transparency baseline than in states relying on federal law alone. The summary text on this page is sourced from public records and does not constitute legal advice. For the authoritative current version of any statute, consult the state's official legislative website.
Key Requirements
Texas has enacted dedicated campus safety legislation that exceeds federal Clery Act requirements. Institutions in Texas must comply with both federal and state-level mandates.
Comprehensive campus safety laws typically require institutions to maintain threat assessment teams, conduct regular campus climate surveys, implement sexual assault prevention education, coordinate with local law enforcement, and establish clear reporting and response protocols.
Safest Campuses in Texas
Frequently Asked Questions
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Explore Texas Data
Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.