School Shooting at Marysville-Pilchuck High School

This excellent front office design can dramatically improve access control for a school.  While this can be effective in reducing the risks for certain types of school violence, this approach fails to address the majority of mass casualty attack methodologies that have been utilized to carry out most school shootings.

This excellent front office design can dramatically improve access control for a school. While this can be effective in reducing the risks for certain types of school violence, this approach fails to address the majority of mass casualty attack methodologies that have been utilized to carry out most school shootings.

School Shooting at Marysville-Pilchuck Similar to past school shootings

The shooting that has left two students and the perpetrator dead in Marysville, Washington should serve as a stark reminder of the need not to become focused too intently on any one type of school shooting. Many school and public safety officials have been intensively focused on how to stop shootings carried out by external aggressors. While this is one form of school shooting we have seen repeatedly in K12 school incidents for decades, it is far from the most common. Unfortunately, many schools have focused on target hardening of main entryways and office areas in response to the Sandy Hook event at the expense of other important prevention measures such as student threat evaluation, visual weapons screening, and pattern matching and recognition which have each been used to avert numerous school shootings.

Fighting the last war

We have noticed a pronounced tendency for parents, school, and public safety officials to focus intently on the most recent mass casualty school shooting event. This has repeatedly resulted in situations where many schools emphasize prevention and preparedness measures for one specific type of event while not paying as much attention to strategies that could help them prevent and prepare for more likely school shooting scenarios. During hundreds of school security assessment projects we have conducted since the Sandy Hook School Shooting, our analysts have noted a dramatic surge in interest in buzzer access, security laminates for front entryways and other target hardening measures for front entryways and office areas. While these types of security upgrades are often logical and in many cases decades overdue, our analysts have also noted a striking number of school systems and non-public schools that lack any viable student threat evaluation strategy. As the majority of mass casualty school shootings have involved students or former students, behaviorally centered approaches should be a priority for schools.

Too early to accurately determine what took place at Marysville-Pilchuck High School

Having worked seven targeted acts of violence and hundreds of more typical school shootings, edged weapons assaults and other major crisis events at K12 schools, my experience has been that much of what is being reported in the media at this stage will prove to be inaccurate. My experience has been that the most compelling and important lessons to be learned from a school shooting are in the case files reviewed by the expert witnesses during civil actions which typically follow the majority of these tragic events.   This makes it imperative that school and public safety officials be pragmatic when considering what is purported to have taken place in any mass casualty school shooting.

Safety Line – a Great School Safety Tool

School safety lines can help students and staff reduce the risks of school-traffic incidents in areas where students and cars both move in proximity on a regular basis.  As school traffic-related deaths are one of the leading causes of school related fatalities, stay back lines can be a high impact tool to reduce risk for K12 schools.

School safety lines can help students and staff reduce the risks of school-traffic incidents in areas where students and cars both move in proximity on a regular basis. As school traffic-related deaths are one of the leading causes of school related fatalities, stay back lines can be a high impact tool to reduce risk for K12 schools.

Safety Lines are an Excellent School Safety Strategy

In his groundbreaking report Relative Risk of Death for K12 Schools, Safe Havens International Adjunct Analyst Steve Satterly documents that far more school-related fatalities involve school-related traffic incidents than acts of violence. While all major categories of school safety incidents should be considered, a careful review of available data indicates that improvements in school traffic safety offer some of our greatest opportunities to reduce serious injury and death for school children and school employees.

What are School Safety Lines?

One simple concept that has been helping reduce the risk of traffic safety incidents at K12 schools is called a safety line or “stay back” line. The safety line can take the form of a painted line, icons forming a line, or other visual aid to help students and staff form positive safety habits to help reduce the chances that students will be hit by cars or school buses. Stay back lines clarify safe positioning for students and staff who supervise them.

School Safety Lines are not Just for Elementary Students

While most educators think in terms of pre-k and elementary students when it comes to pedestrian/motor vehicle safety incidents, cases of middle and high school students being seriously injured or killed also take place with regularity. Safety lines can help older students who can be easily distracted while they chat with friends in person or via the web just as they can help younger students who often fail to realize the dangers that motor vehicles can pose to their safety.

School Safety Lines can Significantly Reduce Risk

There are many other simple ways to reduce the risk of school-traffic safety incidents. Our analysts routinely see opportunities for the use of school safety lines along with these other simple, yet impactful ways to reduce the risk of school-traffic safety incidents.

Snakes: An Unusual School Safety Hazard

Safe Havens Adjunct Analyst Steve Satterly encountered this rattlesnake during a school safety assessment in Texas this week. Safe Havens clients have reported concerns ranging from Mountain Lions, Alaskan Brown bears and even aggressive eagles over the years.  Like other types of hazards, potentially dangerous animals can be mitigated with appropriate responses.

Safe Havens Adjunct Analyst Steve Satterly encountered this rattlesnake during a school safety assessment in Texas this week. Safe Havens clients have reported concerns ranging from Mountain Lions, Alaskan Brown bears and even aggressive eagles over the years. Like other types of hazards, potentially dangerous animals can be mitigated with appropriate responses.

Unusual School Safety Hazard Found

Steve Satterly encountered a rather unusual school safety hazard while conducting a school safety assessment in Texas this week. Steve is part of a team of analysts assessing school safety, security, climate, culture and emergency preparedness for the district. Steve and four district personnel encountered the snake just outside the loading dock door of an elementary school. Earlier this month, another one of our analysts had to address an incident with a water moccasin on a school campus followed soon after by an alligator in a pond adjacent to one of his district’s schools.

Potentially Dangerous Animal Hazards

School officials should keep in mind that different people have varying levels of fear regarding what they perceive as dangerous animals. Though very few people die from snakebite, bear and mountain lion attacks in the United States each year, many people are understandably terrified of these animals. Handling these situations properly can not only reduce the actual level of danger posed by animals but the high levels of fear of animals that many students and staff experience.

Our client schools and districts have often reported challenges relating to a variety of wild and domestic animals including bears, mountain lions, white tailed deer, wild pigs, scorpions, poisonous spiders, and a variety of other critters. One of the independent schools we assessed in Africa has a significant problem with eagles snatching food out of the hands of students when they eat outside. Several students have been injured by the talons of these beautiful but massive birds. While many people assume that urban schools do not face these types of issues, a number of our urban school clients have experienced bears and mountain lions on campus.

Far more typically, aggressive dogs are a problem.   One of our clients had a terrible incident where a kindergarten teacher and four of her students were badly mauled on a playground by a large Rottweiler. Proper training and use of the all hazards approach to school crisis planning can go a long way to prepare students and staff for these types of hazards. Our Texas client has provided staff with information on the recognition of poisonous snakes to employees.   Many schools have reported success with reverse evacuation protocols when bears, dogs, and other animals have shown up on campus.

As with other types of hazards, a proper all-hazards approach to school safety can reduce the danger posed by potentially dangerous animals. Calm and rational approaches can help reduce the actual risks of danger as well as the intensive fear that can result from animals on campus.