Las Vegas Review-Journal (Sunday)

UCLA campus lockdown plan hits snags

Cost to retrofit doors could be millions

- By CHRISTINE ARMARIO

LOS ANGELES — When an active shooter alert spread across the UCLA campus Wednesday, some students found themselves in a frightenin­g predicamen­t: They were told to go into lockdown but couldn’t lock their classroom doors.

Images of students piling tables, chairs and printers against doors on social media sparked alarm and raised questions — yet it was hardly the first time students at a university or school were unable to lock their doors during a shooting.

The same issue arose during other recent deadly attacks, including one at Virginia Tech in 2007 where students barricaded themselves inside rooms and at Sandy Hook Elementary shooting in 2012 where teachers did the same.

Some schools have installed locks in recent years following attacks, but experts say wider adoption has been hindered by the cost to retrofit doors and local fire codes that require doors to open in one motion during emergencie­s.

Yet once an active shooter is in a building, most security experts agree getting into a locked room is one of the most effective deterrents against getting injured or shot.

“How many deaths would it have taken for us to address this issue more seriously?” said Jesus Villahermo­sa, president of Crisis Reality Training, noting that an assailant, knowing police are on the way, usually won’t bother trying to access a locked room.

The former deputy sheriff said UCLA was fortunate in that shooter Mainak Sarkar targeted professor William Klug and then committed suicide. If he’d gone on a rampage, he might have easily found students unable to defend themselves.

The university said Friday it was “assessing safety measures” across the campus and will make appropriat­e changes.

It’s unknown exactly how many school and university classrooms don’t have doors that can lock from the inside. Villahermo­sa said the issue is more prevalent on college campuses than K-12 schools.

There are a variety of reasons why a school may not have classroom locks.

Older buildings constructe­d at a time when classrooms typically contained just desks and a chalkboard — and not the expensive technology many have today — frequently did not include them.

Fire safety regulation­s for rooms with 50 or more students typically require that doors swing outward and be opened in one motion, meaning a bolt that has to be turned first would be a violation.

The National Fire Protection Associatio­n’s life safety code adopted in 38 states does not prohibit putting locks on doors, division manager Robert Solomon said. But there are certain types of locks schools must install.

Solomon said the types of locks found in many hotel rooms are an effective example. The door can be bolted from the inside but it opens in one motion when the handle is turned. Locks like those can cost up to $500 to install.

The price rises when the entire door has to be replaced, he said.

“Schools usually don’t have a lot of extra capital money sitting around,” he said. “But it’s something that they’re thinking about now.”

 ?? PRANASHA SHRESTHA VIA AP ?? This photo provided by Pranasha Shrestha shows a photo of the UCLA engineerin­g building classroom door that was barricaded during the school lockdown after a shooting on Wednesday. Doors open outward with no locks so they had to improvise their own...
PRANASHA SHRESTHA VIA AP This photo provided by Pranasha Shrestha shows a photo of the UCLA engineerin­g building classroom door that was barricaded during the school lockdown after a shooting on Wednesday. Doors open outward with no locks so they had to improvise their own...

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