CHICOPEE – A hero who calmed a dangerous situation and protected young children

Police and school leaders in Chicopee, MA are recognizing the heroic actions of a school crossing guard to protect and calm students during a gun battle where a state trooper was shot Friday.  Campus safety can sometimes go beyond the school grounds as demonstrated in this incident.

Veteran school crossing guard Deborah Paquette downplayed her actions and instead gave credit to police officers. “They were the ones that protected us. They had the incident well under control,” she said. Police Chief John R. Ferraro Jr., Mayor Michael D. Bissonnette and Superintendent of Schools Richard W. Rege Jr. all praised Paquette for her actions during the start of nearly a three-hour gun battle on West Street that started shortly before 8 a.m. Friday.

This is by far not the first time we have seen educators and support employees perform bravely and effectively to protect students.  A school teacher in Mexico was praised last year for her similar efforts to protect and calm elementary students while a gunfight between drug gangs raged outside her classroom.  In another case in the Middle East last year, a campus custodian saved more than 300 students from injury and death when he realized that a man who was trying to enter a cafeteria had a bomb.  The custodian was killed when the man detonated the bomb but no students were injured.

School safety, security and emergency management require the training and empowerment of all school employees.  As this case illustrates, you never know which employee will be first on the scene of an incident and be forced to take immediate actions to save lives.

 

School Bus Driver Refuses to Return School Bus After He Was Terminated

Police arrested a former school bus driver after he refused to allow school officials to take possession of a school bus following his termination.

This rather bizarre case illustrates the difficult situations that sometimes arise after school employees are disciplined. In one Florida case, a school superintendent was shot and killed by a school employee after he was terminated. The former employee used a ruse to enter the superintendent’s office before shooting and killing him. In a more recent case, an administrator at a private school in Florida was shot and killed by a former employee of the school.

These and other tragic cases illustrate the types of school safety issues that can arise from terminations, suspensions and other disciplinary actions that must sometimes be required in school organizations. Safer schools require the types of workplace violence prevention measures that have often proven to be appropriate in other sectors.

Former Private School Teacher Takes Bin Laden’s Place on FBI’s Ten Most Wanted List – This Case Has Serious Implications for School Safety and School Security

Fox News reported today that 30 year – old Eric Justin Toth has been named to replace Osama Bin Laden on the FBI’s Most Wanted list.  The FBI says that Toth is wanted for allegedly producing and possessing child pornography. The investigation began when Toth was caught with pornographic images of children on a camera belonging to the private school where he was employed.  Working towards safer schools requires alertness to individuals who may prey upon children.

School safety strategies should encompass the concern of security screening of volunteers and employees.  This case illustrates the need for schools to not only conduct thorough background checks on all employees before they are hired but to operate with policies and procedures designed to help identify any staff or volunteers who may be a sexual predator.  Sexual predators often seek access to children and youth by obtaining employment with or volunteering for schools and youth service organizations.   The manner in which school employees are supervised also has a direct bearing on campus safety. 

 The fact that a former educator has been placed on the FBI’s Most Wanted List after an investigation that began while he was a school teacher shows serious implications for school safety and school security.

Teacher Arrested for Using Students to Sell Drugs

Recently, Meredith Burris Pruitt, a 31-year-old teacher from Gastonia, N.C., was arrested for using teens to push drugs around school according to the Gaston Gazette. According to media accounts, the former Forestview High English teacher was terminated after an anonymous tip to school officials prompted an investigation into the drug ring. According to the Charlotte Observer the ensuing investigation showed that Burris Pruitt supplied Clonazepam pills — a drug used to treat anxiety, panic attacks, and seizures — to a 15-year-old student and asked the student to give her back profits from the sales. This case has serious school security aspects due to the nature of the alleged criminal acts.

These types of tragic incidents have occurred in the past but are fortunately rare in the field of education in the United States. Screening of applicants can have a direct impact on school violence prevention and other school safety efforts. This and other cases of educators being arrested for serious crimes highlight the need for school officials to not only conduct thorough criminal history checks of applicants but to carefully consider the findings of such checks as well. We have no knowledge of any issues of this type in this particular case and are not insinuating that the district did not conduct proper applicant screening, rather we are using this case as an illustration that like other fields like law enforcement, medicine and business, there are people in any field who will commit serious crimes in the work setting resulting in a need for careful screening.

It is not unusual for some schools and districts to hire employees who they know have criminal records sometimes compromising campus safety. While having a criminal record should not automatically exclude someone from working in a school district, certain types of arrests and patterns of multiple arrests should be reviewed with extreme care before the candidate is offered a position. In addition, the hiring authority should never rely on an applicant’s version of what happened when they were arrested. Police reports, court records and interviews with criminal justice personnel should be used to vet the situation in such cases. Safer schools require careful selection of school employees. In our school safety assessments, we often see significant gaps in school safety due to poor employee screening processes.

Three Adults Killed in Shooting at in – home Day Care Center

Three adults were killed in a shooting at a suburban daycare center located in a residence in a suburb of Minneapolis.  No children were in the center when the shooting occurred.  Police are seeking a suspect who was seen fleeing the scene on a bicycle.  Though rare, other fatal shootings have occurred in day care centers in the United States.

School safety issues including acts of violence sadly affect early childcare facilities.

 

 

Is your School Staff Trained to Spot Tornadoes?

From time to time, we see references in a school crisis plan for a staff member to be assigned to go to the roof or and outdoor area of the school to watch for approaching tornadoes when a tornado watch is announced. An obvious question for us then becomes, “have these designated staff members attended a training session in tornado spotting?

We think this type of training is also a good idea for all school staff who work outdoors during the day supervising students or performing maintenance work. School officials can contact their local or state emergency management agency to learn more about this type of training. Tornado preparedness is a key school safety concern in many regions of the United States.