Sun Sentinel Broward Edition

Federal report highlights key ways to prevent school attacks

Officials should improve mental health resources, monitor social media and improve security.

- By Michael Balsamo

Report on school safety

NEW YORK — School officials nationwide should improve mental health resources, monitor student social media accounts and improve physical security measures, according to a Justice Department report on school safety released Tuesday.

The report, compiled by the department’s School Safety Working Group, examined what the panel believes are the 10 most essential actions that officials can take to prevent mass shootings and other attacks in schools across the country.

School administra­tors around the nation are grappling with whether to resume in-person classes and restructur­ing to increase social distancing and other measures to prevent the spread of COVID-19.

But they also must balance those changes with security measures and protocols that have been put in place in recent years to prevent violence.

Among the report’s key findings is the need for a comprehens­ive school safety assessment, which would be updated annually and would be a foundation for educators to evaluate potential vulnerabil­ities. School officials often forget to address whether there’s an ability to send an emergency mass notificati­on to students and parents, as well as plans for reuniting families in case of a shooting or a lockdown, the report found. It said school officials should also address the possibilit­y of socalled copy-cat attacks after a mass shooting or other incident at another school.

The report also highlights the importance of mental health services and employees with specialize­d training to deal with those experienci­ng a mental health crisis. The report points to the findings of the

Secret Service and U.S. Department of Education that many attackers involved in mass attacks at schools had felt depressed or desperate or have experience­d a history of suicidal thoughts, though many had not received a formal mental health evaluation or diagnoses.

The report also found that bullying prevention and training programs are crucial to reducing school violence. A report by the U.S. Secret Service made public earlier this month found that many of the suspects in mass attacks in the U.S. last year had experience­d stressful situations, or had struggled with substance abuse or mental health issues.

A separate Secret Service report released in November found that most students who committed deadly school attacks over the past decade were badly bullied, had a history of disciplina­ry trouble and their behavior concerned others but was never reported.

Officials also lauded the work of school resource officers — police officers who work in schools and often receive specialize­d training to address school violence — and pointed to several incidents where those officers had built relationsh­ips with students and helped prevent or stop school shootings. The report said school districts may want to consider signing specific agreements with local police to detail the officers’ duties and expectatio­ns or hiring private security guards.

“If the option that meets the needs of the school or school district involves placing armed personnel that are not sworn law enforcemen­t officers in a school, it is imperative that those individual­s receive training that meets industry standards and state requiremen­ts,” the report said.

Officials also believe that practice drills, anonymous reporting systems and increased coordinati­on with first responders are essential for schools.

The report also encourages some “defensive social media monitoring,” which could “provide constant online scanning of messages within geofences around a school or school district to identify threats and at-risk behavior including cyberbully­ing.”

The report says the working group agreed with findings in other federal reports that “when implemente­d with strong protocols to safeguard privacy and free speech,” the social media monitoring can be “an effective tool in a comprehens­ive, multilayer­ed school safety plan.”

 ?? J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP ?? The Justice Department is highlighti­ng a number of actions school officials should take to increase safety.
J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE/AP The Justice Department is highlighti­ng a number of actions school officials should take to increase safety.

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