On-Campus property: On campus refers to property that is owned or controlled by UW-Stevens Point and is within the same generally connected area. This includes academic and administrative buildings, unions, and athletic and event facilities. A subset of “on campus” is “on-campus residential housing.” This includes UW-Stevens Point residence halls and suites.
Public property: Public property includes thoroughfares, streets, sidewalks and parking facilities that are within campus or immediately next to or accessible to campus and on-campus property. The Department of Education uses a “sidewalk/street/sidewalk” rule to determine the boundary of public property.
Non-Campus property: This is property that is owned or controlled by UW-Stevens Point, is used in direct support of, or in relation to, UW-Stevens Point’s educational mission, is frequently used by students, and is not generally connected to main campus. This includes property owned or controlled by a registered student organization. Examples of non-campus property include the Treehaven Field Station and the Central Wisconsin Environmental Station (CWES), property owned or controlled by registered student organizations such as fraternities or sororities, property rented or leased by UW-Stevens Point for an event, research stations, and property owned and controlled abroad.
Separate Campus: A location that the institution owns or controls; is not
reasonably geographically contiguous with the main campus;
has an organized program of study and; has at least one person
on site acting in an administrative capacity. Per this definition,
the Aquaponic Innovation Center in Montello (WI), the Central
Wisconsin Environmental Station, and the Treehaven Field
Station near Tomahawk (WI) are considered separate
campuses under the Clery Act.