The Columbus Dispatch

Gun training preps teachers for shootings

- By Morgan Smith

SPANISH FORK, Utah — Nancy Miramontes had 30 seconds to find the gunman.

The Utah school psychologi­st weaved through a maze of dusty halls before spotting him in the corner of a classroom, holding a gun to a student’s head. She took a deep breath and fired three shots, the first time she had used a gun. One bullet pierced the shooter’s forehead.

“Nice work,” a police officer told her as they exchanged high-fives in front of cardboard props representi­ng the gunman and student.

Miramontes recently joined 30 other Utah teachers at a series of training sessions in which police instructed them how to respond to an active shooter. Teachers went through the shooting drill in a warehouse set up to look like a school, then moved outside to a shooting range.

Active-shooter training for educators is becoming more common nationwide, and Utah is one of several states that generally allow permit holders to carry guns in public schools. Other states, including Florida and Texas, have programs that allow certain teachers to be armed if they are approved under a set of stipulatio­ns.

Utah County Sheriff Mike Smith said the popularity of concealed-carry permits in Utah makes such training more important. About half the teachers brought their own handguns to the shooting range.

“If teachers are going to be bringing firearms into schools, let’s make sure they know how to handle them safely,” Smith said.

At least 39 states require lockdown, active-shooter or similar safety drills, according to the Education Commission of the States. Other states have less explicit requiremen­ts or leave it to districts. Utah requires its elementary schools to conduct at least one safety drill each month, and its secondary schools to have detailed emergency response plans. The firearm training is voluntary, but the Utah County Sheriff’s Teachers Academy already has a waiting list for its next fourweek program.

Despite increasing prevalence, some school safety experts aren’t in favor of firearms training and worry that such lessons could cause undue stress or harm.

“Are police tasking teachers to perform a law enforcemen­t responsibi­lity by arming them to protect others? We have to be cautious of what we ask people to do in these traumatic, stressful situations,” said Ken Trump, a school safety expert with the National School Safety and Security Services consulting firm.

Miramontes said her teacher friends debated the issue on Facebook. But after the training, she said she felt empowered.

“I know how to protect myself and my students now; I know what to expect if the worst happens,” she said.

At the recent session, officers showed teachers how to disarm a gunman, where to shoot on the body, and how to properly aim and unload a firearm. They also went over deescalati­on techniques, self-defense and medical responses such as how to pack a wound and tie a tourniquet on a child.

The teachers paid $20 each to participat­e.

Sandy Grow, a special-needs educator at a middle school in Lehi, Utah, said the massacres at Parkland, Florida, in 2018 and Sandy Hook in Newtown, Connecticu­t, in 2012 left her feeling unsafe at work.

“The idea of being trapped in a classroom with my students and not being able to protect them bothered me,” she said. “I want to defend them and keep them safe, not be a sitting duck.”

 ??  ?? Christy Belt, a fifth grade teacher at Timpanogos Academy, engages in an exercise designed to help teachers make good decisions in situations such as an active-shooter incident.
Christy Belt, a fifth grade teacher at Timpanogos Academy, engages in an exercise designed to help teachers make good decisions in situations such as an active-shooter incident.

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