The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

City employees must have active shooter training

City Council passes ordinance requiring annual training.

- By Raisa Habersham raisa.habersham@ajc.com

After a year — like so many before it — filled with news reports of mass shootings, Atlanta employees and elected officials are now required to undergo annual active shooter training.

Atlanta City Council passed an ordinance requir- ing the training at its meet- ing Monday. The vote came two weeks after two gunmen opened fire at a party in southwest Atlanta injuring two Spelman College students and two Clark Atlanta University students. Atlanta police are still looking for the second suspect in the case.

“People are afraid, and in that moment, people don’t know exactly what to do,” Councilwom­an Marci Collier Overstreet said of the rising number of shootings in public places. “Sometimes it’s a better practice if you’re given the chance to go through training at least once a year.”

Overstreet sponsored the ordinance, which will require training for all part-time, fulltime and contract employees of the city.

The city’s human resources department will maintain and enforce the training, which often includes drills and tactics on how to remain safe during a shooting. The city has not set a budget for the cost of the training or set an agenda for the classes, but Overstreet said Atlanta police will be a part of it.

Active shooter training courses have become more common in recent years, particular­ly in workplaces and schools. City police department­s have offered drills to residents, the most recent being in Dunwoody following two mass shootings in August that left more than 30 people dead.

Overstreet said she hopes the city’s ordinance and similar ones translate into better regulated gun laws.

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