Orlando Sentinel

Managing threats an ongoing struggle

Schools limited due to privacy concerns, lack of resources

- By Carolyn Thompson and Martha Waggoner

Schools around the country have been setting up teams to assess threats posed by students who display signs of violence like the former student who compiled a “hit list” years ago in high school and went on to kill nine people in a weekend shooting in Dayton, Ohio.

Despite consensus on the approach’s benefits, school officials say they are limited in what they can do by privacy concerns, a lack of resources and limits on what they can communicat­e once a student leaves school.

The gunman, 24-yearold Connor Betts, was suspended for compiling a “hit list” and a “rape list” during his junior year at Bellbrook High School, former classmates told The Associated Press on condition of anonymity. Bellbrook-Sugarcreek Schools wouldn’t comment and refused to release informatio­n about Betts, citing legal protection­s for student records.

The goal of screening programs at a growing number of schools is to not only flag and address threats raised by students, but also to track and manage any risk they might pose to themselves and others. Under protocols endorsed by the Secret Service and the U.S. Department of Education, school districts are encouraged to set up a threat assessment team including at least a school administra­tor, a mental health profession­al such as a school psychologi­st, and a school resource officer or another law enforcemen­t representa­tive.

The teams consider concerns raised by other students, school community members and even people commenting anonymousl­y through tip lines in some cases.

At Hilliard City Schools in Ohio, the district uses a network of students trained to spot students who may be inclined to harm themselves or others, based on things they’ve said or posted on social media, Superinten­dent John Marschhaus­en said. After Hilliard Davidson High School student John Staley was arrested in 2016 for plotting to attack his school, the district began requiring a mental health evaluation before it allows any student who has exhibited concerning behavior to return to school.

Marschhaus­en said the district does whatever it can to get students to help but privacy laws protecting health records can interfere with efforts to keep up the support beyond high school.

“One of our challenges as a society is — we have learned that with these young people who need support — it’s a journey,” Marschhaus­en said. “It’s not like you take an action and you’re cured. What does the next step look like as young people graduate high school if they’ve been receiving assistance through high school?”

Schools are coming under pressure to have threat assessment systems in place because of new state laws and court rulings that have held school systems liable, according to Stephen Brock, a professor at the School Psychology program at California State University, Sacramento.

Students who engage in threatenin­g behaviors need to face consequenc­es, but any disciplina­ry response must also be accompanie­d by interventi­on to address the root causes, Brock said.

“There are a number of different explanatio­ns for why someone might engage in an act of violence and what we need to do, if the person is not an immediate risk, is begin to figure out why,” said Brock, who is also the lead author of the National Associatio­n of School Psychologi­st’s school safety and crisis prevention and interventi­on curriculum.

Success stories cannot be discussed because of student confidenti­ality, Brock said, but he said interventi­ons have prevented far more tragedies than those that have occurred.

Still, it remains unclear how widely the protocols have been implemente­d in communitie­s around the country.

Security is a top priority everywhere but cashstrapp­ed schools need significan­t resources and commitment to set up effective prevention teams, said Joshua Starr, a former school superinten­dent and current CEO of PDK Internatio­nal, a profession­al organizati­on for educators.

“Whether or not a school board or principal actually follows through, I don’t think anybody knows,” he said.

At Ohio’s West LibertySal­em High School where a 17-year-old gunman wounded two in 2017, Assistant Principal Andy McGill said his district’s threat assessment team of administra­tors and school counselors is set up to work with outside agencies and law enforcemen­t to address both the immediate and long-term consequenc­es on students and the entire community.

“There are so many pieces to it,” McGill said. “It can be overwhelmi­ng trying to think about the entirety of the situation and the broad scope of the situation but it’s really something you have to do.”

 ?? MIKE GROLL/AP 2016 ?? Students at a middle school in Albany, New York, pass through metal detectors.
MIKE GROLL/AP 2016 Students at a middle school in Albany, New York, pass through metal detectors.

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