The Clark College Security/Safety staff works to ensure a safe and orderly environment in which members of the college community can pursue their educational goals. We provide service and assistance to students, staff and community members and assure compliance with college regulations. We have security officers on campus 24/7 every day of the year.
Our phone-in service is open weekends and extended hours during quarter sessions and for limited hours during breaks. Call the Security desk in Gaiser Hall 118 at 992-2133 for assistance.
ID cards and C-Tran BackPass Quarterly ID cards can be purchased in the bookstore or cashiers office for $3. If you are purchasing a C-Tran BackPass you can purchase that in the bookstore or cashiers office for $20 which includes the ID card. The BackPass is valid in Clark County only and for the entire quarter. To purchase the ID and or BackPass, you need to bring picture ID and receipt to the information desk. The deadline to purchase a BackPASS for each quarter is the Friday of the seventh (7th) week of the quarter. Stop by the information desk during open hours for dates.
ContactLost Items/Parking
If you have lost something or wish to contest a parking violation, please fill out the appropriate form and bring it by our office.
Lost Item Report
Parking Appeal Form
Safety
A Guide to Safety at Clark College
Annual Crime Report
BIT (Behavioral Intervention Team)
Public Records
Public Records Request
Safety Videos Academic Aftershock
(California State Northridge Faculty and Administration Debrief on Northridge Quake)
Part 1
Part 2
Part 3
Academic Aftershock is a three part film about how CSU Northridge faculty, staff, and administrators worked through the aftermath of the Northridge earthquake.
On January 17, 1994, Northridge, California, in the San Fernando Valley should have awoken to a peaceful Martin Luther King, Jr. Day. Instead, residents were thrown out of their beds at 4:31 A.M. with a feeling that the world was coming to an end. The earthquake measured 6.7 on the Richter scale. It was not even the big one. But to the inhabitants of Northridge in the quake's epicenter, it felt like the big one. This devastating event left "more than 50 dead, 5,900 injured, 20,000 homeless, at least six major freeways buckled, countless businesses closed and workers idle".



