School Shooting in Troutdale, Oregon Escalates Fear

Today's school shooting in Troutdale Oregon shows how important it is for all schools to address acts of violence in crisis plans, training and drills

Today’s school shooting in Troutdale Oregon shows how important it is for all schools to address acts of violence in crisis plans, training and drills

School Shooting in Troutdale, Oregon Frightens Parents

A breaking news story relating to a school shooting at Reynolds High School in Troutdale, Oregon received intensive media coverage once local police described the shooting as an active shooter incident.  The school shooting in Troutdale has caused considerable fear.  As is typical of many of these incidents, details, and confirmed facts are scarce two hours after the event occurred.  Police are now reporting that one victim and the perpetrator are dead.

Confusion resulting from school shootings

Having worked seven school active shooter incidents, my experience has been that some facts are likely to change as the situation unfolds.  Police are still clearing Reynolds High School which is described as the second largest high school in Oregon with 2,800 students.  These types of clearing operations can take considerable time.  Though there have been conflicting reports, the latest statement by local police did not confirm any other victims.  We have seen a number of instances where school shootings were initially described as active shooter events when they were in fact single victim shootings.  The confusion of these types of incidents makes these types of misidentification of incident types more likely.

Fear of school shootings increases with each incident

Regardless of the motivation of individual attackers or the numbers of victims, these types of events are resulting in significant fear among parents, students, and school employees.  This fear has been growing steadily for more than a decade.  The fear generated by today’s school shooting in Troutdale, Oregon will no doubt add to the destructive level of fear.  Today’s school shooting in Troutdale has added to that fear. 

Focus on proven approaches to school safety

One fact that is often missed with each school shooting is how many school shootings are prevented.  We routinely learn of successful interventions where school, police, and mental health officials have been able to successfully avert planned school shootings.  While we must learn what we can from each tragedy, we feel it is extremely important to learn from the far more common success stories.  This approach can also help school officials focus on strategies that have been proven to work while we evaluate potentially beneficial but as of yet untested school security approaches.

The Reynolds High School shooting is a tragedy 

At this point, we cannot determine whether successfully applied strategies minimized the loss of life at Reynolds High School today or if the aggressor only intended to kill the one victim who was reportedly murdered today.  Having visited Troutdale after keynoting a statewide school safety conference in Portland after the Thurston High School shooting, it is a dire shame to see such an act of violence in a wonderful community.  Having visited so many communities where terrible acts of school violence have taken place, it is truly tragic to see the lasting effects of these terrible school shootings.   The school shooting in Troutdale will no doubt result in additional fear among parents, students, and school employees.

Bristol School Safety Subject of Parent Email

Bristol School Safety

In light of recent threats on various campuses, the city’s superintendent sent an email top his stakeholders, outlining the various measures the district was taking to maintain Bristol school safety.

These measures included increased police surveillance, video camera surveillance, established evacuation and lockdown procedures, locked entrances at all schools, safety officials and services in each building, assemblies and meetings to discuss safety and security, mandatory sign-in and out procedures for students, and the mandated use of staff ID badges and student passes.

Bristol Schools received 8 threats in an 10 day period. An arrest was made of three students, a 13-year old and two 10-year olds for one of the more recent threats.

Analysis

It appears that the superintendent is taking the correct steps in addressing the situation, including communicating with his stakeholders on the nature of the problem, and the steps the schools are taking to address the issue.  It also seems that there is good coordination between the schools and first responders.

When the issue has been resolved, it would do the schools well to examine their climates and cultures.  There may be nothing wrong with the climates in their schools, but something has led to this rash of threats.  Whether it is a student feeling a sense of injustice, or trying to get out of classes at the end of the year, the school should try to identify the causes and address them, or they may find themselves facing this situation again.

Anytime there is a school safety issue in a school, take immediate steps to remedy the symptoms, but don’t forget to analyze the issue and identify the root cause.  This often requires taking an honest look at yourself, and so people often avoid this step.  Don’t.  The safety of children is no place for bruised egos.

 

School Hazard and Vulnerability Assessments – Vetting Vendors

This photo was taken during one of our school hazard and vulnerability assessments.  A staff member locked their keys in the band room and cut this hole in the door to unlock the door.  This would not only make it easy for someone to steal expensive musical instruments, but makes an excellent safe room easy for an aggressor to enter.

This photo was taken during one of our school hazard and vulnerability assessments. A staff member locked their keys in the band room and cut this hole in the door to unlock the door. This would not only make it easy for someone to steal expensive musical instruments, but makes an excellent safe room easy for an aggressor to enter.

School Hazard and Vulnerability Assessments – Screening Vendors

I apologize for the recent lack of blogs.  I have been conducting school hazard and vulnerability assessments for three straight weeks in Washington D.C, Richmond, Virginia and Ketchikan, Alaska.  With our other projects and the book release, I have not had time to post. 

Each of the assessment projects involved a very competitive bid process with careful screening of vendors and have gone very well.   At the same time, school safety assessment projects can go awry if the vendor and the hiring organization are not a good fit for one another.  This can happen even with the best school security firms and great school systems and non-public schools.  Fortunately, it can be relatively easy to screen vendors to find a good fit for school hazard ability assessment projects.

Finding a good fit for your school security project

The most common complaints I hear from school officials who have been dissatisfied with a school hazard and vulnerability assessment project are similar to those I often see in the school safety malpractice civil actions I work as an expert witness.  In both types of situations, problems with school hazard and vulnerability assessment projects usually stem from an inadequate screening of vendors.  There are ways school officials can identify firms that are a good fit.  These approaches also minimize exposure to school safety litigation:

Require at least a dozen references

Any firm that is qualified to perform school security assessments should be able to provide dozens of references from K12 school organizations.  We recommend that at least six references be checked and checking all twelve is an excellent idea.

Require a strategic report as well as a written report for each assessed school

For public school systems, a report which provides a comprehensive overview of opportunities for improvement as well as positive findings for the district is far more helpful than reports for each school and support facility alone. A detailed report of each school can also be very helpful for public school districts.

Require detailed and comprehensive reports

While busy educators naturally want concise reports, a ten to fifteen page report will likely serve as “exhibit A” when a school or consulting firm is litigated after an incident.  This is because a properly conducted assessment will require far more information than can be fit in such a short space.  Though an executive summary of five to ten pages is typical for a solid evaluation, a proper strategic report will normally consist of fifty to one hundred and fifty pages of data, photographs, and narrative content.  Individual school reports should typically range between thirty to fifty pages per school. 

Require a draft report and an opportunity to fact-check reports before they are finalized    

There have been horror stories of school officials who have been stuck with bad school security assessment reports.  Just as the hiring attorney in a federal civil action typically fact-checks an expert witnesses report before it is finalized, school officials should not take chances with consultants who are not open to fact-checking of their reports. 

These basic requirements can go a long way to help you select the best firm for your situation.  The time it takes to properly vet school security firms is considerably less than the time required to fix a mess created by a poorly performed hazard and vulnerability assessment process.

Staying Alive during an Active Shooter Incident

 

Staying Alive Concepts Exemplified by SPU Student

Friday,  a shooter, who was not a student at Seattle Pacific University, used a shotgun to shoot and kill one and wound three students.  While he was reloading, Jon Meis, a student at SPU, used pepper spray to subdue the shooter, then tackled him.  This act exemplified several concepts taught in the new book, Staying Alive: How to Act Fast and Survive Deadly Encounters.

In Staying Alive, one of the first concepts the reader learns is situational awareness.  Situational awareness is the ability to quickly assess and act on a situation.  Given the high stress, life-and-death situation that was developing right in front of him, Jon Meis knew that the shooter was reloading. Another concept is the Window of Time, the critical first few seconds in which decisive action can make the difference between life and death.  Being able to recognize the shooter was reloading, then deciding to act showed that Mr. Meis had great situational awareness.

That brings up another concept from Staying Alive, base of knowledge.  In Jon’s past, he had developed a base of knowledge that gave him the information he needed to act as he did.  From the article, the Facebook Pages he liked included Remington Arms, Kel-Tec, and the NRA, indicating he may have had prior experience with weapons.  His actions certainly bear this out.

Another concept from Staying Alive that Meis exemplified was preparedness.  The human brain and body react in specific, somewhat predictable ways under life and death stress.  Training can overcome some of the low-level effects of crisis stress.  It would not be surprising to find such preparedness in Meis’ past.

Jon Meis, acted bravely to help end a tragic incident. The lessons he teaches us by his actions are those we have tried to put forth in Staying Alive.   It is our hope that by reading Staying Alive, more people will be in a position to positively affect such incidents should they find themselves in danger.

SRO Dies after Breaking Up Fight

SRO Suffers Heart Attack

Sergeant Daryl Giles, an SRO with the Philadelphia School Police Department, suffered a heart attack after breaking up a large fight in George Washington High School.  He complained of chest pains, and was then found in a school restroom, unresponsive.  He was pronounced dead at the hospital.

He had served in the Philadelphia School Police Department for 19 years, and was a U.S. Army veteran.

c_daryl-giles

End of Watch: June 2, 2014
Thank you for your service, Sergeant Giles.

Parent Uses Hammer Attack against Student

School Hammer Attack

A 9-year old student was on the playground when parent volunteer lured her into a restroom in the school and assaulted her with a hammer.  A security guard and a teacher walked in on the attack and was able to put a stop to it.  The girl was taken to a nearby children’s hospital.  The attacker has been charged with assault with a deadly weapon.

Analysis

While there has been a lot of attention paid to Active Shooters in schools, schools should also be prepared for assaults using a variety of weapons.  Claw hammers can make fearsome weapons, are easily concealed, and are readily available.

In the book Staying Alive: How to Act Fast and Survive Deadly Encounters, a couple named Abe and Erin are featured.  They survived an assault in their home by a man wielding a hammer and a hatchet. Abe successfully fought off the attacker while being grievously wounded.  His actions saved the lives of five people, including his own.

Abe is recovering from his hatchet and hammer wounds.

Abe in the hospital recovering from his hatchet and hammer wounds.

Schools should not focus on a single aspect of school emergency response, but on techniques and procedures that can be used in multiple types of incidents.  Research shows it is best to use scenario-based training to build a base of knowledge from which to operate.  Using different types of scenarios will build a broader base of knowledge.

The link below is the story of Abe and Erin’s ordeal.