The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Board OKs $8 million to lease new weapons detection system

District on track to confiscate more weapons than ever.

- By Cassidy Alexander cassidy.alexander@ajc.com

In addition to the weapons scanners, the school board approved last month the $4 million purchase of a crisis alert system for all schools.

The DeKalb County Board of Education approved the lease of a new weapons detection system for middle and high schools.

The $8 million will lease a detection system for four years from Evolv Technol- ogy. It’s the same technology recently implemente­d in Atlanta Public Schools, and used at the Mercedes-Benz Stadium and Lenox Square mall.

The school district is on track to confiscate more weapons this school year than in any of the previous five years, interim Superinten­dent Vasanne Tinsley reported to the board last week.

Evolv Technology said it can put the system in schools in as little as three weeks, Bradley Gober, the district’s executive director of public safety, told school board members.

“I think that the stakeholde­rs and the parents and the students of DeKalb County should be very excited that they have a board of education and a superinten­dent that take safety and security so seriously,” Gober said.

The system allows people to walk through the detectors without stopping, emp- tying their bags or waiting in lines. School personnel will monitor the system, and can quickly intervene when the system identifies questionab­le objects. Only one person must monitor each entrance. There’s still a question of which personnel will do that, but Gober said the district has the man- power to operate the technology.

New board member Whitney McGinniss proposed postponing the vote to collect more informatio­n — but the rest of the board was ready to act.

“I don’t want to think of a life being lost,” said board Chair Diijon DaCosta. “I want to be able to be on the right side, proactivel­y, to be able to help ensure that safety is the No. 1 priority of the school district.”

Board members in the state’s third-largest district have been considerin­g a weapons detection system for at least five years. And over those years, the district has been confiscati­ng more and more weapons from stu- dents, Tinsley said. The district found 310 weapons so far this year, she reported. That’s up from 235 weap- ons in 2018-19. Weapons, in this case, could be anything from a gun or knife to a slingshot or cigarette lighter.

In Georgia, there were 195 cases statewide in which a student was discipline­d for bringing a handgun to school in the 2021-22 school year, nearly three times as many as in 2014-15, according to data from the Georgia Department of Education.

A DeKalb middle school stu- dent faces disciplina­ry charges after a gun was discharged in a classroom last month. There were no injuries.

In addition to the weapons scanners, the school board approved the $4 million purchase of a crisis alert system for all schools last month.

Employees will be equipped with badges they can press to alert administra­tors and law enforcemen­t in the event of an emergency. Gober said that system is on track to be functional by August.

Tinsley emphasized that the district is prioritizi­ng student mental health and engaging families to help alleviate some of the problems the district has had with student behavior. Additional­ly, it’s been in the process of updating its camera system and creating security vestibules in the front of every school. It’s also been reminding students of its “See Something, Say Something” campaign and using K-9 units to seek out weapons and drugs.

“At the end of the day, we want our students to have a safe and healthy learning environmen­t,” Tinsley said. “But we also know that we must do whatever we can to make sure they are safe, healthy and whole.”

 ?? JASON GETZ/JASON.GETZ@AJC.COM ?? Weapons detection scanners are coming to DeKalb middle and high schools, along with other new safety measures.
JASON GETZ/JASON.GETZ@AJC.COM Weapons detection scanners are coming to DeKalb middle and high schools, along with other new safety measures.

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