The Signal

Talking about school safety

- BISCHOF Ron Bischof is a Santa Clarita resident.

Like many of our Santa Clarita Valley neighbors, my family and I were horrified by the recent mass murders at a high school in Florida.

My wife and I have three sons currently attending college in Southern California and as parents, we’re naturally concerned about school and community safety.

I’ve written on the topic of gun violence in The Signal previously and make it a practice to not react to the news cycle until the arrival of verifiable facts from multiple sources.

Now that details are available, here’s a brief summary of known facts related to this homicidal attack:

Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School had expelled the former student for violent behavior and school ground weapons violations.

Local law enforcemen­t had made dozens of in-person responses to residences/locations of the shooter prior to the attack.

A recommenda­tion that the perpetrato­r be involuntar­ily committed for a psychiatri­c evaluation that was decided against because the Sheriff’s School Resource Officer withdrew his support.

The FBI had received a credible tip from a relative of the shooter detailing threats of armed assault. Another tip was received based on a comment made on a YouTube video, stating the attacker wish to become a “profession­al school shooter.”

The FBI has advised it did not follow establishe­d protocols on the tips received and did not make a referral to the Miami Field Office to follow up.

The assigned Broward County Sheriff’s SRO and 3 other deputies remained outside the campus perimeter while the murders were occurring.

Any objective review of these facts reveals a systemic breakdown of school administra­tion communicat­ion and cooperatio­n with local law enforcemen­t compounded by failure at the Federal level.

Had government acted in these multiple red flag instances, it’s highly probable the mass homicide would have been prevented.

Curiously, the news cycle hasn’t been primarily focused on these government failures and the non-enforcemen­t of extant law, i.e., arrest of those who present credible threats of violence and confiscati­on of weapons in their possession.

Ask yourself: what’s the probabilit­y that teenage survivors, understand­ably distraught and traumatize­d, would be capable within a week of the attack to initiate the necessary media contacts and build out of an organizati­onal structure to orchestrat­e a national protest?

Isn’t it rational to conclude they’re being orchestrat­ed by media producers and other organizati­ons with political objectives?

Subsequent­ly, we’ve read or heard other school news about a backpack explosive device, a mass knife attack and a school shooter who was disrupted by an armed School Safety Officer.

Despite these disparate means of attack, the primary focus remains on banning firearms and raising age limits rather than actual measures that will increase school safety.

Responsibl­e law-abiding gun owners are assured time and again, “We’re not after your guns.”

Contrary to these assertions, House Democrats with over 150 signatorie­s introduced a bill prohibitin­g sale of semi-automatic weapons, the overwhelmi­ng choice of Americans who choose to purchase firearms.

When a DUI driver causes fatalities, we properly ascribe blame to the person engaged in criminal behavior, not the automobile.

I’d posit Federal, state and local law enforcemen­t need to develop a robust tip reporting system that the average person in a community could understand and access.

Such a system would provide legal immunity for the concerned citizen and have a rigorous process, metrics and resolution reporting by the controllin­g law enforcemen­t agency with an audit trail.

Schools should review physical barriers and restricted access points that aren’t easily breached by unauthoriz­ed persons.

Additional­ly, the president should order compliance for military NICS reporting.

Congress should also examine ways to standardiz­e as well as give incentives to states that report prohibited person data to NICS—with due process for those reported in error by an independen­t court unaffiliat­ed with any Executive Branch agency.

I’m not a legal expert, but it appears none of the above would infringe on the Constituti­onally recognized rights of law-abiding citizens.

Let’s have an authentic conversati­on within our community about solutions that have proven efficacy in our schools.

“Explanatio­ns exist; they have existed for all time; there is always a well-known solution to every human problem — neat, plausible, and wrong.” — H. L. Mencken, twentieth-century journalist, satirist, social critic, cynic and freethinke­r

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