School Crisis Plan Expert Tip – Copying School Crisis Plans Can Create Major Legal Challenges

One thing we routinely see when we conduct school safety, security, climate, culture, and emergency preparedness assessments is school crisis plan content that has been copied unlawfully.  Unfortunately, it is rather common for people to copy school crisis plan content without verifying that they can do so.  In a typical situation, a staff member from one school or district asks permission to copy part of the crisis plan from another school organization and is given permission.  However, it is not uncommon for the content being passed on to be licensed or copyright protected intellectual property from a vendor.  An experienced school safety expert can often quickly track down the original source of plagiarized school crisis plan content. In some cases, people knowingly and intentionally claim to have created the content in the school crisis plan.  In either case, copying and utilizing someone else’s intellectual property without permission from the owner of the rights to that property can be a serious legal violation.  Individuals and their organization can be litigated and a complaint of plagiarism to a professional regulatory agency could result in sanctions up to and including revocation of teaching certifications etc.

The fact that intellectual property has been used unlawfully in school crisis plans can also garner some pretty negative media coverage and could become a significant issue during litigation in the wake of a school crisis event.

School Tornado Expert Offers Logical and Carefully Researched Advice on School Tornado Preparedness

The devastating tornado that left seven children dead in Moore, Oklahoma has resulted in extensive media coverage.  As with other mass casualty school crisis events, inaccurate and potentially dangerous information has been reported. 

For example, news reports have related that it is always dangerous to use hallways for tornado shelter areas.  Having worked with thousands of schools across the nation and with architects and engineers who design them, there are situations where following this advice could result in mass casualty loss of human life.  With the dramatically varying designs of schools across the United States, there are schools where some interior hallways are the best available shelter. 

I have had the good fortune to interact with many different people who are well versed on specialty areas in the school safety arena.  Steve Satterly has spent considerable time researching school safety topics including school tornado preparedness measures.  I have thus far never met anyone who knows more about the topic of school tornado preparedness than Steve.  After carefully reviewing the research on this Steve makes a convincing case that assuming that hallways are never suitable shelter areas could result in less safe areas being selected. As with school shooting incidents, making blanket conclusions based on any one tornado event can be a serious and potentially deadly mistake.

School Safety Expert Tip – Use Caution When Considering New School Safety Measures

School safety is naturally more on the minds of parents, students and school officials since the deadly school shooting at Sandy Hook elementary school.  School officials across the nation have spending millions of dollars and making major changes in school safety measures.  Unfortunately, there are a host of increasingly popular school safety concepts that have not been validated as effective.  In some cases, schools are changing to approaches that we have some solid indications are likely to increase rather than decrease danger. 

For example, we are seeing some very troubling reactions when crisis simulations are run in schools where students and staff are taught to attack a gunman as a last resort.   With more than 3,000 one-on-one crisis simulations to date, we are seeing bizarre reactions such as an incident where a teacher and students prepared to attack a public safety officer in an Iowa school after they completed a training program of this type. As we outline in our paper on the topic, an 18 month research project revealed that a number of school employees have already been shot and killed needlessly attempting to disarm people with guns in K12 schools.

During school safety assessments of more than three dozen public, parochial and independent schools across the nation since the Sandy Hook tragedy, we have seen a startling increase in the number of staff who respond that they would attack people who are threatening to commit suicide with a gun or who would travel across the campus to attack a drunk brandishing a gun when these responses clearly increase danger.  We predict that school officials and public safety agencies will be successfully litigated when students and staff misapply these techniques under stress and attack people who are not active shooters causing injury and/or death. 

We urge school officials to resist the temptation to adopt school safety concepts that may sound good but have not been validated by testing.   Just as importantly, school officials should keep in mind that most serious injuries and deaths on K12 campuses are not related to school shootings.  In fact, school violence is not a leading cause of death for students or school employees in the United States.  Focusing too intently on active shooter incidents has and will likely again result in the deaths of students and staff. 

1 student dead, 1 missing in field trip accident

St. Paul, MN

A class from Peter Hobart Elementary School, digging for fossils in a park, became victims of a landslide as rain-soaked ground gave way and collapsed onto the children. One child is dead, one is missing

Two children were taken to the hospital.  One was treated for minor injuries and released, the other is in serious condition.

Middle School student intervenes in bullying incident, gets assaulted

Roton, CT

At Roton Middle School, a friend of a bullying victim intervened, and got assaulted by the bully.  The bully pushed the the hero down to the ground, then kicked them in the head.

The bully was arrested, and may have to have a court hearing.

Student punches police officer

College Station, TX

A call was made from the Rudder High School Adaptve Behavior Department about a student who was out of control.

The police officer arrived and attempted to stop the student.  Without warning, the student punched the officer just under the jaw.