Daily Camera (Boulder)

Outcry after city pressures schools to keep kids safe

- By Carolyn Thompson, Annie Ma and Jake Bleiberg The Associated Press

UVALDE, TEXAS » When the shooting began at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Mario Jimenez’s son was in the classroom next door. The 10-yearold saw his teacher and a friend hit by bullets that passed through the wall. Now, Jimenez worries the boy will never again feel secure in a classroom.

“I don’t think these kids are going to feel safe going back to school no matter what they do. They’re supposedly protected by the system, and they know the system failed them,” he said.

In the aftermath of the May shooting that killed 19 children and two teachers, poor decisions by law enforcemen­t have attracted widespread criticism, but the Uvalde school system is also taking its share of the blame for basic failures — unlocked doors, a spotty alert system and lax enforcemen­t of rules. Now, incensed parents and politician­s want concrete safety solutions as the attack becomes part of a larger conversati­on about how to prepare students for emergencie­s without potentiall­y inflicting an emotional toll with active-shooter drills.

An investigat­ive report released Sunday by the Texas Legislatur­e found the district did not treat maintenanc­e issues like broken doors and locks with urgency. For instance, the lock on the door to one of the classrooms where the shooting occurred was known to be faulty, and the House committee concluded the shooter likely entered the room through that unlocked door.

The House committee found “a regrettabl­e culture of noncomplia­nce by school personnel who frequently propped doors open and deliberate­ly circumvent­ed locks” at Robb Elementary. The report said school administra­tors and district police tacitly condoned the behavior, noting that the school suggested the practice “for the convenienc­e of substitute teachers and others who lacked their own keys.”

At an Uvalde school board meeting this week, parents and families were outraged at the oversights. Jazmin Cazares, whose younger sister Jacklyn was killed, asked what the school district would do to make students feel safe returning.

“How am I supposed to come back here? I’m a senior. How am I supposed to come back to this school?” Cazares asked the school board Monday. “How are you going to make sure I don’t have to spend 77 minutes bleeding out on the school floor like my little sister did?”

At the same meeting, Rachel Martinez declared herself unwilling to send her daughter, Layla, back to school after the armed intruder snuffed out 21 lives — and any confidence she had that Layla would be safe.

“This failure falls on all of you,” Martinez told the board at the three-hour meeting. “When you go home and lock your doors tonight, remember: That shouldn’t be a luxury.”

The vast majority of U.S. school systems conduct lockdowns and active-shooter drills that, in some cases, include simulated gunfire and blood as children crouch quietly out of sight. But the drills are only one part of the equation, according to experts.

Amy Klingman, founder of the Educator’s School Safety Network, said the impulse to double-down on simulation­s or buy the latest gadgets is understand­able, but those responses can be part of larger plans that include enforcing the basics, like locking doors and training staff. Drills can emphasize securing a classroom or quickly evacuating children in a variety of scenarios, such as a parent without legal custody attempting to take a child.

“Why does history keep repeating itself? Because we keep doing the same thing,” Klingman said. “We keep emphasizin­g only active-shooter response, and we don’t make daily operationa­l safety a part of what we do.”

The Uvalde report exposed another potential flaw: Sounding the alarm too regularly can diminish vigilance and lull schools into a false sense of security.

The school’s proximity to the border with Mexico meant frequent lockdowns whenever Border Patrol agents or state police troopers were in the area attempting to apprehend migrants. Between February and May, the school experience­d nearly 50 lockdowns or security alerts.

“After a period of time, you would have that diminished expectatio­n of vigilance ... ‘Oh, here’s another. We’re doing it again,’” said Mo Canady, executive director of the National Associatio­n of School Resource Officers. Schools with that many alerts might consider a tiered system that distinguis­hes between threat levels, he said.

But not all employees even received alerts because of poor Wi-fi or phones that were turned off or in a drawer. Some employees would have had to log in to a computer to get the message, the report found. Others didn’t understand how to use the system, said Ben Adams, a Uvalde coach.

“It was introduced to us in a short, 10-minute presentati­on before school started,” Adams said at the meeting.

Elizabeth Ruiz, the mother of three children in the Uvalde schools, said the students at Robb Elementary did “so many, so, so many” lockdowns this year but believes improving the physical safety of the building — having a single point of entry and requiring scannable identifica­tion — would do more than potentiall­y frightenin­g drills.

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