School Officials Criticized for Decision not to Evacuate School After Bomb Threat in Killeen, Texas – Shows Lack of Understanding of Bomb Threat Procedures by the General Public

Some parents in Killeen, Texas are upset that a local high school was not evacuated after a bomb threat was received on Monday.  Students were taking an exam when the threat was received but the District’s Director of School Safety John Dye said the decision not to evacuate was not based on the testing at Ellison High School.

Dye said that Killeen ISD authorities searched the school and found no signs of a suspected device.

Most people mistakenly think that automatically evacuating a facility whenever a bomb threat is received is the safest course of action, but many government agencies including the Federal Bureau of Investigation and the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco and Firearms Enforcement suggest that multiple options including keeping occupants in place while a sweep is conducted can help to reduce the ability of a bomber to more effectively target evacuees by calling in bomb threats and patterning how occupants will react.

In the white paper on school bomb threat management I developed for the Indiana School Specialists Academy and in our school bomb threat management training programs, Safe Havens recommends not evacuating as one appropriate option for school bomb threats.  This is partially because a site that is not fully secured by fencing and bomb detection screening measures can be more easily targeted if they always evacuate for bomb threats.  When considering that this also makes it easier to target building occupants with a vehicle bomb, a flexible approach makes even more sense.

Two Glynn County, Georgia School District Police Officers Recognized for Acts of Valor

I reprinted the below text from the Glynn County, Georgia School District website.  We had the privilege of working on a Readiness and Emergency Management for Schools (REMS) grant with the district last year and I had the opportunity to work with the district’s police chief Rod Ellis and several other officers from the department.  I know that Chief Ellis must be and should be extremely proud of the work of these outstanding police officers.  As Chief Ellis mentions, the winners of this prestigious award are selected by their brother and sister officers from across the state.  We congratulate Officers Hope and Hopper on their selfless actions, their superb work and for this recognition from their peers.

Officers Mark Hopper and Shane Hope of the Glynn County Schools Police Department recently received the Officers of the Year for Valor Award from the Peace Officers’ Association of Georgia (POAG) for their response to an incident at Brunswick High School on the first day of school in August 2010. The award was presented at the POAG annual conference at Sea Palms on St. Simons Island in late September.

While investigating two vehicle break-ins at BHS, a parent of the owner of one of the vehicles came to the school and confronted the officers. Hope watched the man as he returned to his truck, reached inside and put something in his waistband, which turned out to be a loaded 9 mm handgun. The man then continued to confront the officers, becoming more and more enraged. Recognizing that the man was carrying a weapon, Hope and Glynn County Schools Police Chief Rod Ellis, who had just arrived on the scene, drew their weapons and ordered the man to disarm. With the man refusing to cooperate, Hopper moved in behind him and disarmed him without any weapons being fired.

“Officers Hope and Hopper used their training to diffuse an extremely intense situation without anyone being harmed,” said Ellis, who nominated the two for the POAG award. “I was very impressed with their actions. Had Officer Hope not keyed into what was happening when the man retrieved the weapon from his truck, the end result could have been very different.”

Ellis noted that this was the first time that the POAG Valor Award had ever been presented to a school resource officer. “SROs are certified peace officers in the state of Georgia and they carry the same responsibilities as other law enforcement officers. It is gratifying to know that our colleagues around the state recognized and appreciated the professionalism with which Officers Hope and Hopper handled this situation at Brunswick High School.”

 

 

Suspect Arrested After School Shooting in Finland

A man who shot another person in the hand apparently entered a local school in Tempere, Finland and fired a round through a classroom door before being arrested by responding police.  No staff or students were injured in the incident which is still under investigation.

School shootings have been relatively rare in Europe but do occur from time to time.

Video with Audio from School bus Security Camera Depicts Henryville, Indiana School Bus Driver as Calm and Collected Under Life and Death Stress

School Transportation Director Steve Satterly from Indiana sent me a link to a video clip depicting school buses being devastated by tornadoes on Henryville, Indiana.  Steve is becoming quite an authority on school and school bus tornado preparedness as mentioned in previous blogs.  He toured the damaged schools in Henryville shortly after the storm hit and took photographs of the schools and damaged buses. 

I just viewed the video which appears to have been dubbed with audio of a school bus driver alerting the students on her bus to the tornado that was headed in the direction of their school bus.

While it is impossible to obtain a complete picture of her actions from snippets of audio, I was personally deeply impressed with how calm the driver sounded, how quickly she seemed to take action and by the fact that she can be heard counting the children as they evacuated the school bus.  My son and I have often trained more than 10,000 drivers in a single year.  We continue to see examples of school bus drivers rising to meet incredible challenges.

I will be keynoting the California Association of School Transportation Officials Annual Conference in Sacramento, California tomorrow morning and I intend to tell the attendees how this is yet another example of a school bus driver performing extremely well under life and death conditions.  In my 20 years of work as a police officer, I have heard more than a couple of well-trained law enforcement officers who got more excited on the radio during an emergency than this driver sounded (including perhaps even myself on a few occasions).

Every school bus driver in America should be proud of her actions.

Indiana School District Provides Enhanced Emergency Training for School Bus Drivers

School Bus Fleet Magazine ran a feature article in the last issue about Indiana School Safety Specialist Steve Satterly and his efforts to enhance the level of emergency preparedness training in his school corporation.

Satterly, who has authored a guest blog and is authoring feature articles and a white paper on school and school bus tornado preparedness serves as an athletic director, transportation director and as the director of school safety for his district.

Attempted Abduction of 10-Year-Old Boy in New Zealand School a Close Call

Police and school officials in New Zealand say that a 10-year-old boy had a close call when a teenager lured him to a wooded area near the school when he went to use a school restroom. When they arrived at the wooded area, the older boy pulled out a length of chain and was apparently about to tie the child to a tree when some adults passing by scared him off.

This type of incident demonstrates the need for good student supervision and access control in schools. Our analysts have found few strategies that can improve school safety, climate and culture as well hour for hour and dollar for dollar as efforts to improve student supervision.