Codes can Kill

For more than a decade now, the United States Department of Education, FEMA as well as many state departments of education, law enforcement and emergency management have been advising schools about the dangers of using codes such as “code yellow”, “code red”, “Mr. Smith and Wesson is in the Building” etc. to announce emergency protocols such as lockdowns.  This approach has proven to be dangerous because staff often get confused between the various codes even in schools that conduct monthly drills using codes.

During a recent school safety audit, we conducted approximately 200 crisis simulations with staff to measure how well staff could make decisions and communicate during life and death crisis situations.  This district uses color codes such as those described above and requires monthly emergency drills.  As we have seen with other school districts, school administrators as well as rank and file staff repeatedly became confused as to which code they should use when tasked with responding to video and scripted crisis scenarios.

It is important to remember how dire the consequences can be when a code is misunderstood.  For example, in this district, the confusion between a lockdown code and the code for severe weather sheltering could quickly result in a mass casualty event.

Though many schools still use this approach, we have seen a high fail rate during assessments as well as during actual emergency situations at schools.  We urge school officials to carefully reconsider this approach.  Please keep in mind that there is a dramatic difference between conducting a lockdown drill where a school administrator knows in advance that they will be conducting the drill and school employees facing a specific situation, making fast decisions and communicating with other staff.   

Missing Massachusetts Toddler Found in Dark Classroom

Police in Westport, Massachusetts are investigation to learn how a three year old child was left in a classroom at a day care center at the end of the day.  The child was found in the dark classroom at the end of the day during a search for the missing child.  This case illustrates how critical student supervision is to school safety.

Gun found in Toronto school

Toronto middle school principal Craig Crone assures parents that his school is safe after he found a loaded Colt .38 Special revolver in a student’s book bag during a search.  Crone stated that he found the gun while searching the student’s book bag after a fight at the school.  The 12-year-old student has been arrested and faces disciplinary action.  Anyone who follow Safe Havens should know how dangerous it is for an educator to search a student for weapons.

Gun incidents and school shootings have been problematic in Canada despite strict firearms laws.   When I presented at a national school safety conference in Toronto three years ago, attendees brought up a tragic school shooting in the area.  They stated that a high school student was shot and killed in a high school in the area because he was African-Canadian and school officials were criticized for their attempts to form a magnet school for black students to protect them from such acts of racial violence at school. 

The school principal feels that security cameras will make the school safer and they are in the process of adding cameras at this time.  “Those things are going to make a difference, I believe, and it’s going to reassure staff and the community and the parents, obviously.”

There is no research to show a correlation between security cameras and reductions in school weapons violence.  Most targeted acts of violence have occurred in schools with CCTV coverage.  While cameras can be a valuable addition to school security strategies, other measures such as reducing the number of fights on campus, visual weapons screening, random surprise metal detection, improvements in student supervision and educational programs have shown far more dramatic reductions in student weapons violations.

The school notified parents that there had been an incident at the school by way of a letter, but were not notified that a gun had been found.  The school serves 560 students in Grades 6, 7 and 8.  A meeting was set for Wednesday to provide parents with additional information.