Orlando Sentinel

Parkland students skeptical about new safety measures,

- By Scott Travis

Marjory Stoneman Douglas High created a new environmen­t Monday, with clear backpacks, bag searches, I.D. lanyards, police officers at every entrance and a student body skeptical that any of it will make them safer.

District officials say Stoneman Douglas, the site of a Feb. 14 shooting that killed 17, is serving as a pilot for possible district-wide security changes. Some schools already have more cops on campus, and dozens are now armed with AR-15 rifles. The district says it’s expediting plans to provide fencing and gates at about 100 schools.

The district limited the number of places students could enter Stoneman Douglas in the morning to four, with guards stationed at each spot. Metal-detecting wands weren’t being used Monday but are being considered, officials said.

“This is still being explored by the district. No decision or date has been set for the use of metaldetec­tion wands,” district spokeswoma­n Cathleen Brennan said.

The new precaution­s didn’t prevent the school from receiving an emailed bomb threat Monday, which the Broward Sheriff’s Office determined to be unfounded.

“The BSO bomb squad responded and swept the school with negative results,” Sheriff ’s Office spokeswoma­n Keyla Concepcion said. “Additional deputies were placed on campus as a precaution. The investigat­ion is ongoing.” The school district said the students were not evacuated.

On Monday, the first day back from Spring Break, administra­tors handed out clear backpacks — the only ones allowed at the school for the time being, officials say. The school confiscate­d non-clear backpacks, returning them to students at the end of the day. Band instrument­s and sports equipment were left with teachers and coaches.

Students were given lanyards to hold photo identifica­tion cards, which they must wear at all times.

Some students compared their school to an airport, others to a prison. Few voiced support for the changes.

“Do you want me to take my shoes off when I walk into school as well?” tweeted Carly Novell, a senior at the school and editor of the Eagle Eye student newspaper.

Ariana Lopez, a junior at the school tweeted, “First member of my family to be in prison — oh wait. I’m in school, sorry, can’t tell the difference without my glasses.”

On Monday morning, many students entered the campus carrying plastic grocery bags containing their books and other belongings. Students reported a number of bag searches by school officials.

“Got my brown paper lunch bag checked today while walking to class. Lady saw my sandwich and figured it wasn’t a threat,” tweeted Christy Ma, an Eagle Eye editor.

The backpacks were donated by Walmart and the Broward Education Foundation. Many students posted photos of them on Twitter, along with sarcastic comments.

One student complained about the smell of her bag, comparing it to “the inflatable pool toys when they’re immediate taken out of the box.” Another said the bags are bound to get mixed up when everyone has the same one.

Kyrah Simon, a 17-year-old junior, questioned the benefits of the clear backpacks.

“I think it’s the illusion of security, and it’s not going to accomplish anything, except make students feel like their privacy is being violated,” Simon said.

The new policies are an attempt to balance convenienc­e and privacy with safety and security, Stoneman Douglas Principal Ty Thompson wrote in a weekend memo to parents. He said these policies may be facing adjustment in the coming weeks.

“It is very difficult to balance both convenienc­e/privacy with safety/security ... but I will do my best to balance the two,” he wrote.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States