Fair
40°
Crystal Lake, IL
Fair|Forecast »

Cary-Grove drill simulating school shooting ends

Text Size: AaAaAaAaAa

(Continued from Page 1)

“There hasn't been a huge deluge of emails of phone calls,” Puma said. “A lot of the parents were supportive of the drill itself, some disagreed with the firing of the blanks. It's important to have [the sound of gunfire] in your knowledge bank in case you need to react in that situation.”

----------

CARY – Some parents at Cary-Grove High School say that firing blanks goes too far in a school active-shooter drill.

The high school is scheduled to conduct a "Code Red" lockdown exercise shortly after 9 a.m. today.

School officials are working with Cary police on the simulation and said they plan to fire blanks so students "might be able to recognize the sound and react quickly should an active gunman situation occur," a message on the high school's website says.

A school official will fire several rounds of blanks from a starter pistol – the kind used at sporting events, Cary Police Chief Steven Casstevens said. "The purpose is to take the Code Red drill one step further. There are many [students] who've never heard a gunshot before," he said.

Students will be in locked classrooms when the blanks are fired, district officials said.

"It's going to be a very controlled situation preceded by a PA announcement," District 155 spokesman Jeff Puma said.

"Any step we can take to give them an advantage in a crisis situation is a step we should be taking," he added.

Some parents were outraged the school would consider simulating gunfire in the wake of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Newtown, Conn.

"They want to familiarize kids with the sound of gunfire, how sick is that?" one parent said.

Other parents feared the sound of gunfire would traumatize their children.

"If you want to teach a Code Red, teach it, but there is no reason to make it feel [real]," said Sharon Miller, a parent of a Cary-Grove freshman. "We have fire drills, but we don't set fires to make it feel more [real]."

The exercise is a sad reality in today's society, Casstevens said, and it's exactly what schools and law enforcement should be teaching.


Reader Poll

Which gaming system do you own?

Xbox
Wii
PlayStation
other
more than one