The Commercial Appeal

Schools provide more armed security after Sandy Hook

- By Christine Armario Associated Press

MIAMI — In the Fort Lauderdale suburb of Pembroke Pines, students returning to school this year are being greeted not only by their teachers and principal. They’re also meeting the armed school resource officer who will be stationed permanentl­y on campus.

Crime in this middleclas­s community has been on a steady decline, but city officials decided to place a school police officer at every elementary, middle and high school after a gunman killed 20 children and six adults at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Conn., last year.

“It is a relief to have them here,” Lakeside Elementary School Principal Linda Pazos said Monday, the first day of school.

In the aftermath of the massacre at Sandy Hook, many districts across the nation are increasing the number of school resource officers on campus and, in a few cases, permitting teachers to carry concealed weapons themselves.

An armed security presence is now standard in many of the nation’s middle and high schools, but it has been a rarity at elementary schools. Few districts can afford to place a school resource officer at every elementary school, because there are so many and they tend to have fewer incidents requiring a police response than middle and high schools.

Lawmakers in every state in the nation introduced school safety legislatio­n this year, and in at least 20 states those proposals became law, according to the National Conference of State Legislatur­es.

That first, immediate shot, chances are nobody is going to be able to stop. The difference is going to be responding to it.”

Kevin Quinn, president, National Associatio­n of School Resource Officers

The new laws range from one authorizin­g a volunteer, emergency security force at schools in Franklin County, Ala., to one allowing Missouri state employees to keep firearms in a vehicle on state property, if the car is locked and the weapon is approved by authoritie­s and not visible.

Bernard James, a professor of constituti­onal law at Pepperdine University in Malibu, Calif., said one clear trend among legislatio­n introduced since Newtown has been assessing the security of elementary school campuses.

Past efforts to prevent school violence had not focused on elementary schools, James said, “and that lack of dedicating resources is what was under examinatio­n.”

There are more than 67,000 elementary schools nationwide, more than twice the number of middle and high schools combined.

Sandy Hook Elementary had all the standard safeguards and more, including a locked, video-monitored front door. It did not have a school resource officer. Instead, like most districts, there were police officers at nearby middle and high schools.

There are many advantages to having an officer stationed at school: Students who see or hear something suspicious immediatel­y know who to tell; the mere presence of an officer can deter wouldbe attackers; and if a gunman does attack, a school resource officer is already there to respond, saving critical minutes between a 911 call and dispatcher­s mobilizing police.

“That first, immediate shot, chances are nobody is going to be able to stop,” Kevin Quinn, president of the National Associatio­n of School Resource Officers, said. “The difference is going to be responding to it.”

Quinn said his group has trained twice as many new officers as last year, more than 90 since January.

While some question the need for an armed presence on campus, arming teachers and others when a school resource officer can’t be hired is even more controvers­ial.

 ?? WILFREDO LEE/ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Dara Van Antwerp, the school resource officer at Panther Run Elementary School in Pembroke Pines, Fla., walks the hallways of the school where she teaches a Gang Resistance And Drug Education (GRADE) program in the Fort Lauderdale suburb.
WILFREDO LEE/ASSOCIATED PRESS Dara Van Antwerp, the school resource officer at Panther Run Elementary School in Pembroke Pines, Fla., walks the hallways of the school where she teaches a Gang Resistance And Drug Education (GRADE) program in the Fort Lauderdale suburb.
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