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Schools’ security efforts examined

Districts, regional superintendent work to improve safety for students

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“This is something we can do to increase our survivability should – God forbid – something happen,” Schermerhorn said. “I can’t change gun laws, but this is something we can do now.”

The regional office is so supportive of ALICE training that it has offered to pay half of the training for each of the county’s 80 public schools, or $750 per school, Schermerhorn said. 

“I think that’s a drop in the bucket when you’re looking at school safety,” she said. 

But critics of ALICE find fault in two letters of the acronym – C and E.

“Counter” simply means distracting the shooter by any means possible. This can be yelling, throwing objects or otherwise distracting the gunman. Critics of this practice say it teaches children to fight a gunman and could put them at risk for further harm.

“Would throwing objects incite a suspect to fire his or her gun when he or she might not otherwise do so?” questioned Ken Trump, a school safety expert and president of National School Safety and Security Services. “While proponents of such training can point to real and hypothetical scenarios where it may have some impact, we can also look at situations where it could have escalated a situation.”

Schermerhorn said she supports only older children being trained to counter a gunman.

Those who find fault in the escape component of the training say it leads to even more chaos.

ALICE training encourages fleeing the scene, but only when it is known where the threat is, if it’s not nearby, and once a predetermined meeting place is established. This evacuation is similar to how students would evacuate during a fire, said Erin Harris, who has been working with the Regional Office of Education to get this instruction into local schools.

Harris is a former member of local law enforcement and a one-time teacher.

She’s given all that up to focus on promoting and selling the ALICE training, for which she is certified. 

ALICE instruction has been met with resistance, Harris said, mainly because it’s a far cry from traditional lockdown drills. While these drills have their place in school safety, it often makes students “sitting ducks,” she said.


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