The Daily Courier

Giving teachers guns? Might as well just give them PTSD, too

Police experts urge intensive training if teachers are armed

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WORLD — The idea of arming teachers to take out a shooter is alarming some law enforcemen­t experts, who say it takes more than just being a good shot at a gun range.

They say it would require specialize­d and repeated training to teach educators the proper tactics and enable them to conquer their fear and remain calm and clear-thinking in a fast-moving, life-or-death situation.

“Simply putting a gun on the premises and hoping someone’s going to do the right thing with it is baseless,” said Chris Grollnek, a former law enforcemen­t officer who specialize­s in security issues, especially active shooter situations. “All you’re doing is signing people up for PTSD.”

The idea of arming teachers to take out a shooter is alarming some law enforcemen­t experts, who say it takes more than just being a good shot at a gun range.

They say it would require specialize­d and repeated training to teach educators proper tactics and enable them to conquer their fear in a lifeor-death situation.

“Simply putting a gun on the premises and hoping someone’s going to do the right thing with it is baseless,” said Chris Grollnek, a former law enforcemen­t officer who specialize­s in active shooter situations. “All you’re doing is signing people up for PTSD.”

The idea of arming teachers isn’t new. Some schools around the country already allow educators to bring guns onto school grounds.

But the notion is gaining momentum after a shooting at a high school in Parkland, Florida, last week left 17 students and adults dead. It turned out the only armed officer on duty at the school stayed outside rather than going inside.

President Donald Trump suggested paying bonuses to teachers willing to be trained to carry firearms.

Experts who have spent careers on SWAT teams say it doesn’t come naturally. It can take not just training but experience in pressure-cooker situations before instructio­n takes hold and they respond effectivel­y.

“What an individual officer or a team of officers will do in an active shooter incident calls on every aspect of their overall training and policing. And that’s one of the reasons why you’d be hard-pressed to find someone in policing who thinks it’s a good idea to arm teachers,” said Rick Myers, of the Major Cities Chiefs Associatio­n.

“Teachers’ training and expertise has nothing to do with police tactics — shoot-don’t-shoot decision making, the psychologi­cal trauma that accompanie­s violence, all the things that are built into what police officers deal with on a daily basis.”

Around the country, in places like Ohio and Texas, some schools post warnings that staffers are armed, while others keep potential attackers guessing.

Chris Cerino, a former law enforcemen­t officer, now offers training to educators through his Cerino Consulting and Training Group.

The program has taught 1,300 educators over five years. They spend 28 hours learning not just how to fire a gun, but such things as ambush tactics, responding under stress, and treating wounds.

Students on occasion have left the class within the first few hours after realizing they’re not cut out for it.

Cerino said teachers realize the usual tactics taught in school — lockdowns and throwing books and other objects at a gunman — are simply “not going to stop a determined killer with a gun. And all that’s going to do is delay in the inevitable.”

Christophe­r Albrecht, a fourthgrad­e teacher from Brockport, New York, and the state’s 2018 teacher of the year, said there is already high anxiety in schools with lockdown drills and fears of shooters.

“I can’t imagine if I had a gun that was visible on me what that would do to anxiety levels. If anything right now, I’m trying to lower anxiety levels in my classroom. I think that would just raise them,” he said.

Mo Canady, executive director of the National Associatio­n of School Resource Officers, urged every school to first get an armed officer posted before arming teachers.

Also, he said, arming teachers could make it difficult for police.

“We see one person or six people with weapons drawn in plaincloth­es — that could go bad in a hurry,” Canady said.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Teacher Scott Beigel died during the Feb. 14 school shooting in Parkland, Fla.
The Associated Press Teacher Scott Beigel died during the Feb. 14 school shooting in Parkland, Fla.
 ?? The Associated Press ?? Bus driver Pearlie Corker hugs a supporter as teachers returned to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Friday for the first time since a Feb. 14 shooting left 17 dead.
The Associated Press Bus driver Pearlie Corker hugs a supporter as teachers returned to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Friday for the first time since a Feb. 14 shooting left 17 dead.

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