On Columbine Shooting Anniversary, School Security Industry Continues Expanding Despite Challenges
On Columbine Shooting Anniversary, School Security Industry Continues Expanding Despite Challenges
Todd Ponton of Aurora, Colorado hammers crosses into the ground on the
sixth anniversary of the Columbine High School tragedy, in Littleton
Colorado, April 20, 2005.
Photo: REUTERS/Rick Wilking RTW
Columbine High School freshman Austin Pawelka, 14, commemorates the
ten-year anniversary of the Columbine High School shootings at the
Columbine Memorial Park in Littleton, Colorado, April 20, 2009.
Photo: mark piscotty/getty images
James Dann of Thornton, Colorado, pauses at one of the names of the
Columbine victims on the tenth anniversary at the Columbine Memorial
Park in Littleton, Colorado, April 20, 2009.
Photo: mark piscotty/getty images
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The April 20, 1999, massacre at Columbine High School in Littleton,
Colorado, sparked a renewed gun control debate, flooded schools with
police officers and inspired a wave of zero-tolerance discipline
policies. As a result, one of the deadliest school shootings in American
history launched the issue of school security into the national
spotlight.
Seventeen years later, it's still there.
Every event so horrifying renews efforts bylawmakers,
administrators and parents to keep their children safe — while also
creating opportunities for businesses ready to help them do so. But the
school security business has encountered several challenges as it has
evolved over the past two decades. In part because it's spurred on by
such emotional events, some experts argue the industry tends to focus
too much on preventative equipment, active shooter scenarios
and misguided teacher training programs that can leave schools
vulnerable to other threats. Instead, they say, a balanced approach
is neededto blend technology with threat assessment techniques and locally developed standards.
"The school security industry is now a million-dollar industry. A lot
of people and a lot of organizations are using a very fear-based
approach to market whatever they're selling," said Michael Dorn, the
executive director of Safe Havens International, a campus safety
nonprofit based in Macon, Georgia. "What we're seeing is an
unprecedented amount of approaches that have never been tested, never
been validated to work, but we're seeing people describe them as best
practices and school districts rushing out to put them in place."
Street
artist Mark Panzarino, 41, prepares a memorial as he writes the names
of the Sandy Hook Elementary School victims six months after the
massacre, at Union Square in New York, June 14, 2013.
Photo: REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz
Columbine, where high schoolers Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold killed 13 people and then themselves, often serves as aprimary
reference point for school shootings. Some of the more
infamous massacres often mentioned in the same breath include those
at Virginia Tech in Blacksburg, Virginia, in 2007; Sandy Hook Elementary
School in Newtown, Connecticut, in 2012; and Umpqua Community College
in Roseburg, Oregon, last October.
The recurrence of these devastating incidents has led to fluctuations
in the funding dedicated to protecting schools. After Columbine, the
U.S. Justice Department spent more than $870 million on school resource
officers, according to Mother Jones, and other government agencies provided $58 million in grants supporting mental health, the Wall Street Journal reported. After Sandy Hook, research analyst IHS released a study predicting that the market for school security system integration would reach $4.9 billion by 2017.
To be sure, a lot of the capital has created programs that work. For
example, about 80 percent of colleges now have threat assessment teams,
and a third of educators told the School Improvement Network in 2013 their schools now have better locks on their doors.
A Los Angeles school safety officer stands guard as students arrive at a school on Dec. 16, 2015.
Photo: RINGO CHIU/AFP/Getty Images
The urgency of addressing school security, however, also can provide
an opportunity for companies to promote products and techniques that
may not be schools' best options, said Ken Trump, president of the
consulting firm National School Safety and Security Services in
Cleveland. Whiteboard shields, backpack armor and even
bulletproof underwear have cropped up in recent years.
"You have people who are maybe well-intended, but it's not their
expertise, [selling these products]," Trump said. "While certainly any
type of physical security is a supplement, it's not a substitute for a
more comprehensive school safety program. It's not an issue of just
fortifying your front entrance, it's what you have in place with those
people beyond that entrance that is the most valuable asset in school
safety."
David Muhlhausen, a criminal justice expert with the D.C.-based
conservative think tank the Heritage Foundation, similarly noted that
these items, while often helpful, aren't universally useful. "Not every
school needs metal detectors," he added.
Muhlhausen said what schools do need is training on how to handle a
variety of threats. But standards for how to achieve that can't come
down from the federal government — they need to be locally developed.
They also should not focus too much on active shooter scenarios,
said Safe Havens International's Dorn. About a quarter of the active
shooter incidents between 2000 and 2013 took place at American schools, according to the FBI, but the percentage of youth homicides that occur at school is under 2 percent, according to the National Center for Education Statistics.
An
man playing an "active shooter" is grabbed as he enters a classroom as
"students" take cover during ALICE (Alert, Lockdown, Inform, Counter and
Evacuate) training at Harry S. Truman High School in Levittown,
Pennsylvania, on Nov. 3, 2015.
Photo: JEWEL SAMAD/AFP/Getty Images
Training for dangerous situations should be individualized based on
the issues the schools face most frequently, Dorn said. For instance,
a study by his organization estimated
that about 525 people died in school bus accidents or other incidents
with vehicles on school property between 1998 and 2012. By comparison,
62 were killed in active shooter incidents.
"We want to deal with all forms of death and serious injury, not just those that frighten us the most," he added.
Dorn gave an example about a client he once worked with in an old
schoolhouse that didn't have air conditioning. In order to keep the
classrooms cool, teachers would leave the doors open — a major security
risk. In their case, the school didn't need tactics for fighting active
shooters as much as it needed to fix its AC.
"If we're going to spend $10 million, let's make sure we're doing it in the wisest way," Dorn said.
Dewey Cornell, director of the Virginia Youth Violence Project at the
University of Virginia in Charlottesville, wrote in a commentary
provided to International Business Times that he worried fears about
school shootings had diverted attention and resources aimed at
addressing students' mental health.
"The nationwide movement to increase school security seems to have
displaced efforts to prevent school violence through psychological
interventions," Cornell said in the American Journal of Orthopsychiatry last
year. "School systems that are spending millions to reinforce their
building entrances, hire security staff and install electronic door
locks and alarm systems nevertheless lack funds to hire enough
counselors, psychologists and social workers to work with troubled
students and carry out prevention programs."
In Chicago, teachers' union field representative John Kugler said
active shooters physically in schools aren't as common as gang violence
nearby. But he said he wasn't sure educators were being regularly
trained on either threat. He hasn't been able to get documents from the
district detailing its training methods.
"If thedistrict isn't using their resources to do
safety training, then what are they using their resources for?" Kugler
said, adding that he wasn't aware of any sessions on terrorist threats
or hostage situations, either.
If there's one state making moves on school security, it's Indiana,
where Gov. Mike Pence signed Senate Bill 147 into law there last month.
The bill turns over authority for setting school security standards to
the state Department of Homeland Security and requires an emergency
response system that transmits information to law enforcement during an
active shooter situation, the Clarion News of Corydon reported.
Mason Wooldridge, co-founder of the Our Kids Deserve IT group that
helped push the legislation through, said he hoped these factors would
improve officers' response times and tactics once arriving on scene. He
also said he wanted the state to establish building codes for
constructing new schools, requiring things like "much better doors,
glass that can't be penetrated [and] a camera system directly connected
to the dispatch center."
Wooldridge also supported the remodel of Southwestern High School,
which NBC's Today Show labeled "the safest school in America." Teachers
at the Shelbyville, Indiana, school carry key fobs at all times that can
alert police to a problem, and halls are equipped with smoke that can
impede a suspect's vision, PRI reported.
Though he knows not all schools will be able to afford that,
Wooldridge said he hopes the movement spreads to states like
Pennsylvania, North Carolina and Florida.
"Let's not wish we had done something better in a few years," he said. "Let's do something now."
Relatives
and community members gather to commemorate the tenth anniversary of
the Columbine High School killings at the Columbine Memorial Park in
Littleton, Colorado, April 20, 2009.
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