Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Metal detectors and guards are expensive. About $500,000 the first year for equipment and staff costs. MoCo has 250 schools. Can we afford $125 million for that? Maybe.
You will never stop this type of killing if someone wants to kill. You can, however, minimize the number of deaths. There are a lot of questions you can ask your principal. How many entrances to the school are there? Are they locked? Are they monitored? Can they be unlocked from within to let someone in? What are the safety plans? Can certain parts of the school be locked down/cut off to minimize movement within? What are the safety provisions for kids moving between trailers and the school? What are the safety provisions for the playground? Can individual classroom doors be reinforced? Has the school/school system been researching best practices with respect to security? Who do students/teachers/parents/community members contact when they are concerned about a specific individual or threat? A couple of people formally contacted the FBI about the Florida shooter. But that got lost in the paperwork, apparently. Telling local police is likely a better option.
Everyone sadly overlooks the impact on children to feel like they go to school in a prison. It messes with their head and makes them fearful of everything and everyone.
Anonymous wrote:Metal detectors and guards are expensive. About $500,000 the first year for equipment and staff costs. MoCo has 250 schools. Can we afford $125 million for that? Maybe.
You will never stop this type of killing if someone wants to kill. You can, however, minimize the number of deaths. There are a lot of questions you can ask your principal. How many entrances to the school are there? Are they locked? Are they monitored? Can they be unlocked from within to let someone in? What are the safety plans? Can certain parts of the school be locked down/cut off to minimize movement within? What are the safety provisions for kids moving between trailers and the school? What are the safety provisions for the playground? Can individual classroom doors be reinforced? Has the school/school system been researching best practices with respect to security? Who do students/teachers/parents/community members contact when they are concerned about a specific individual or threat? A couple of people formally contacted the FBI about the Florida shooter. But that got lost in the paperwork, apparently. Telling local police is likely a better option.
Anonymous wrote:There was an armed guard in FL. 17 dead in 5 minutes despite the guard. Shooter didn't stop because of the guard.
Anonymous wrote:To thwart shooters?
Anonymous wrote:Yes. Along with metal detectors. And one single point of entry. So you can't get in with a weapon bc the detector goes off, then you of course just try to shoot your way in, and there are 2-3 armed guards right there who in turn attempt to shoot you first. If it can work in federal courthouses, it can work in schools.
(YES gun control is the preferred option and these war time weapons shouldn't be sold etc etc. but since it may take us 20 yrs to get gun control in this country, let's stem the bleeding in the meantime.)
At my local school, there is a cop on duty. But problem is it's a huge school like Parkland - with these weapons of war, they can gun down so many people in 2-3 min that by the time the cop is radioed and makes it to the part of the building, the damage is done. If you have armed guards at the door, any shootout occurs at the doors. And frankly classrooms should be no where near entrances -- though at my school they aren't -- it's all kinds of lobby/general spaces and it takes a while to get down a hall leading to classrooms.