Wednesday, May 28, 2014

Staying Alive with Calvin & Hobbes

Calvin & Hobbes



The above cartoon accurately depicts one of the primary reasons for Staying Alive.  Only a chosen few are cops, or are in the military.  The rest of us are left to face the world on our own, afraid.  This doesn't have to be.

Staying Alive can teach you how to protect yourself and your family in ways that you can be comfortable with.  It can teach you situational awareness or how to be aware of what is going on around you, the pros and cons of security technology, warning signs to look for in people, and how to prepare your home.  It can teach you pattern-matching and recognition, or how to train yourself to notice the little things that let you know trouble is coming.  It can teach you whether to carry a gun or not.  It can teach you how to handle the stresses of incidents like a home invasion, or a burglary.

Calvin's dad is correct, if you are not safe in your own home, you're not safe anywhere.  Buy a copy of Staying Alive.  Read it, learn it, live it!  You can make yourself safe at home without turning your home into a fortress.

The best knows is you can do it for as little as $14.99!

Tuesday, May 27, 2014

Large School Fight Leads to Juvenile Charges for Six

Pocono, PA

Six students at Pocono Mountain Charter School are being charged with assault and disorderly conduct after a conflict between two groups of girls evolved into a larger melee.  One group accused another of snitching about something, and it was on. 

A female teacher who attempted to break up the fight suffered minor injuries.  No arrests were made at the time, but after viewing video and interviewing witnesses, juvenile charges were filed on sic students. 

Analysis

School staff should be instructed in the proper methods for intervening in a fight, after a sound policy on such interventions has been developed.  Physically intervening in a fight between two females will often prove frustrating for the adults, as they will go all in. 

My first time breaking up a fight between two girls as a teacher did not go as planned.  I was in the Army Reserves at the time, and was in the best shape of my life.  I was an Infantry Drill Sergeant, and I was going to take charge of the situation and save the day.

Wrong!

I stepped in between the two female combatants and instantly became the focus of both.  I was hit, kicked and scratched from all directions, and I won't even mention the choice verbiage that was thrown my way!  I grabbed one of the girls by the arm and yelled, "Knock it off!" and was bitten on the arm for my efforts.

I had a plan, but it was a poor one.  Have a better plan in place to intervene when students go at each other.  Some schools have plans to NOT intervene.  If that is the case for your school, prepare for the inevitable questions from parents and possibly the media as to why you didn't intervene, especially if injury occurs.

Staying Alive, or unscathed, means having a good plan that you've practiced!

Situational Awareness and Race

Stephen A. Smith

Mark Cuban, billionaire owner of the Dallas Mavericks, made this comment last week. "If I see a black kid in a hoodie and it's late at night, I'm walking to the other side of the street," he said. "And if on that side of the street, there's a guy that has tattoos all over his face -- white guy, bald head, tattoos everywhere -- I'm walking back to the other side of the street."

Stephen A. Smith, a commentator for ESPN, supported this statement, then clarified his comments a day later (See the link at the top).

Without addressing any of the underlying race issues, I felt drawn to the comments from both Mark Cuban and Stephen A. Smith in regards to personal safety.  Situational awareness uses, in part, pattern-matching and recognition.  Our lives provide us with the experiential capacity to understand current events in light of past experiences, and can use those past experiences to provide us with a solution to a problem.  Thus, when walking down a street, if we see something that bothers us, we move to the other side of the street to avoid a potential problem.  Gavin de Becker, in his book The Gift of Fear, stresses that people need to pay attention to these warning signs.  He urges people to listen to their inner voice, and play it safe.

Staying Alive delves deeper into this.  The techniques we address are not race contingent, but based upon psychologically-based behaviors. Using the street analogy, if I am walking down the street and I see worrisome behavior, like a man in a hooded sweatshirt waiting in a place that doesn't make sense, it would not be prudent to ignore my experience and training that tells me something's not right, just to satisfy some social more.  My analysis is not based on the person's race, but on their behavior. After all, people of all races wear hooded sweatshirts.  If they do so at night while lurking in the shadows, my analysis is not going to include what race they might be, but on whether their behavior may constitute a threat.

It's not the color of a person's skin, but the behaviors they exhibit that should be used in developing our situational awareness.  Don't let social issues cloud your situational awareness.  If you are basing your safety decisions on the color of someone's skin, then shame on you!  Personal safety is colorblind. 

Look past the color of their skin, and look at how they are acting, and use their behavior to determine if they are a threat to you or not.

Sunday, May 25, 2014

Lessons Learned from the California Drive-By Shooter Incident

California Drive-By Shooter

Saturday morning a troubled 22-year old man stabbed his three housemates to death, then began a shooting rampage that killed six and wounded numerous others.  There are numerous lessons to learn from this story, even as the investigation into the incident continues.

Staying Alive Lesson 1 - Situational Awareness

Situational awareness is a vital skill for staying alive.  Situational awareness means that you maintain awareness of everything that is going on around you.  When you gear shots, or hear an engine running hard, find a safe place, THEN scan your area.  Too often people freeze in place to scan their area, and that can be fatal. 

Staying Alive Lesson 2-Warning Signs

Events like this always provide warning signs, afterward.  The shooter had posted numerous videos, and a manifesto, that indicated his pain, and what he wanted to do about it.  My personal and professional ethics prevent me from posting links to any of them, as I will not engage in the veneration of evil.  The links are easily found on the Internet for those who want them.

The shooter even posted a 141-page manifesto that described his life.

The family of the shooter said they tried to alert authorities to their son’s disturbing behavior.  Police interviewed him and found him to be a “perfectly polite, kind and wonderful human.”

As the investigation moves forward, more lessons may be learned.  Let's learn these lessons and Stay Alive.

Friday, May 23, 2014

School Bus Accident Injures Three

School Bus Accident

A school bus in Southport, FL was preparing to stop to drop off a student when it was hit in the right rear by a box truck.  Two 11-year old children and the driver of the truck were transported to the hospital.  A Florida Highway patrol spokesman said none of the injuries were life-threatening.

Analysis
I serve as the Director of Transportation for a Central Indiana school district.  This is my nightmare.  My drivers constantly remind their children to sit in their seats properly.  School buses are designed to provide students with a "safe box" while sitting in the seats, facing forward.  Anytime a child gets up in the seat, turns around, or crawls around on the bus, they get outside of the safe box and place themselves at risk.

I have had conversations with parents about their child sitting properly, and their question was, "What's the big deal?"  Stories like this answer that question.  Students are not on the bus to socialize, play, or mess around.  They are on the bus to ride home.  They can play when they get home.  All these things also increase noise, which can distract the driver.

Parents, please talk with your child about the proper way to sit on the bus.  It does make a difference.  It can help them Stay Alive.

Thursday, May 22, 2014

Mom Assaults Bully in School

Mom Assaults Bully

A 30-year old mother of a girl who was allegedly being bullied entered Olivet Charter Elementary School without signing in.  She went to the cafeteria, had her son tell her who was bullying her daughter, then confronted the alleged bully in front of other children.  The mother threatened the boy about bullying her daughter, then grabbed him around the neck.

The bullying claims are being investigated, but in the meantime, the mother has been arrested and charged with felony child abuse.

Analysis
Schools that have procedures for signing visitors into the school should also have in place procedures for what to do when a person does not follow procedures.  The mother's assault was not witnessed by any adult, which begs the question, how did this happen?

An adult entering the school, bypassing the sign in procedures, and then assaulting a student without being seen by the adults indicates some refresher training on sign in procedures, as well as student supervision techniques.

In this day and age, we cannot afford to let incidents like this happen.

Tuesday, May 20, 2014

Mother, Daughter Assault Two Fellow Students on School Property

The Augusta Chronicle

A mother and her daughter were arrested after assaulting two students of T. W. Josey High School.  earlier that day, the daughter was involved in a fight with the two students.  The students were suspended.  One was walking home with her 65-year old grandfather when the mother and daughter duo pulled up in a car driven by the mother's boyfriend.  The mother, daughter and boyfriend got out and assaulted the girl.  They then approached the second girl and assaulted her as she was walking home.  Both assaults occurred on school property.

An arrest warrant has been issued for the boyfriend.

Analysis
There are two points for schools to consider in this story.  First, do you have a procedure for ensuring the safety of students who are leaving your school after an altercation?  Second, what procedures does your school have in place for dealing with the combatants in the office while you sort things out?  The children involved in a fight do not always let it go while awaiting punishment in the office.  The continuation of the fight on the office can lead to injured students, school personnel and/or damaged property.

Some related topics in Staying Alive; Warning Signs of Violence, Situational Awareness, and Pattern-Matching and Recognition.  Being aware of the signs a person is ready to continue violence, and maintaining awareness are vital skills for keeping the peace in K-12 schools.

Policemen are not Supermen

Fox 59 TV

The story above is of an IMPD officer, off duty, who was arrested for OVWI, Operating a Vehicle while Intoxicated. It seems IMPD has been in the news a LOT recently. From the comfort of our chairs in our safe homes, it is easy to sit in judgement on an organization, and individuals, who serve and protect. We shake our heads, give ourselves a "tut, tut", and feel sorrow over the lost honor of a fallen cop. Not one who has fallen in the line of duty, but fallen from grace.

I have had the privilege of participating in two Citizen's Academies, the FBI's Indianapolis Field Office Citizen's Academy, and the Speedway Police Department Citizen's Academy. The one thing I learned during both of these experiences is the vast number of decisions these folks make on a daily basis. FBI agents have numerous cases they work simultaneously, while the Speedway police officers face scorn, derision, and outright verbal abuse from those they deal with, without the benefit of making them stop.

For these men and women, they daily number of decisions take their toll. You want to talk about stress in your life? Make the life-and-death decisions these folks do daily and get back to me. Walk a mile in their shoes, if you can.

Having seen, briefly, what they go through, I find myself amazed that more of them don't succumb to the stresses. They are, after all, people like you and I. They feel pain and loss, they have pride, they are human they are flawed. Yet, because they made the choice to stand between chaos and us, they are special people. They are Sheepdogs.

The vast majority of the members of IMPD, the Speedway Police Department, and the FBI are great people, flawed as they are as humans. 9 out of 10 of us flinch away from angry, hurtful people. the 1 in 10, the magnificent Sheepdogs, face that anger, that desire to do harm, and they place themselves between us and them. There is a price to pay.

That doesn't mean we accept unacceptable behavior, nor does it mean that they should not face the consequences of their actions. In that regard, they are no different from us.

But we must not take the easy road and allow the actions of individuals to dishonor the organization, or the vast majority of the members of those organizations who do their duty every day.

They are the thin blue line that stands between our civilization and chaos.

I, for one, am thankful they are there.

Monday, May 19, 2014

5 Students Arrested for Threat against School

Keenesburg, CO

Last week Monday, May 12, two students were arrested after a student reported a possible threat of violence against Weld County High School involving weapons.  A third student was arrested on Tuesday.  All three were charged with suspicion of interference with staff, faculty or students of an educational institution.

On Friday, the School Resource Officer at the high school became aware that two friends of the three suspects were plotting to pick up where their friends left off.  They were arrested on the same charge as their friends.  All of the boys who were arrested identify themselves as a "gang".

The Weld County Sheriff's Office issued the following statement, “The Weld County Sheriff’s Office has focused additional resources toward the investigation of this incident and will continue to provide heightened security measures as deemed necessary through the end of Weld Central’s school year.”

Analysis
Lost in the clutter of this story is that a student, and an SRO provided details about this plot.  In Chapter 5 of Staying Alive, the warnings signs of violence are provided for both adults and children.  In that chapter you learn that there is usually 'leakage' that occurs, indicators that someone is planning violence. 

It is good that the student at Weld County High School felt comfortable enough with school personnel to come forward with the information.  It is also good that the SRO was on-the-spot with the development of his/her intel.

Staying Alive's Chapter 5 is a must read for people who work with children!

Sunday, May 18, 2014

Girl, 10, Raped in School by Brother and Sister Duo

Oklahoma City, OK

A mother alleges that her 10-year old daughter was raped in a restroom at Edgemere Elementary School.  Her daughter came running out of the school in tears and told her mother, "Mama, they touched me down there."  The mother took her daughter to the hospital, where doctors said her injuries were "consistent with a sexual assault".  Allegedly, the boy's sister held the victim down while he pulled down her underwear, pulled his pants down, and raped her.

Oklahoma City School District officials immediately called the police, and are cooperating with the investigation.

Analysis
In such incidents, the attention is first turned toward the safety of the child, and then the question, "How could this happen?" is asked.  The first thing I would look at is the procedures by which students leave the classroom.  Do they sign in and out of the classroom?  How do teachers maintain accountability of students at all times?

It is easy to think that elementary schools are safe because the kids are so young and the teachers are so attentive.  This is denial thinking.  In Staying Alive, we outline how to combat denial.  Denial is a very powerful thought process, but it is one that is chosen.  Elementary schools are sometimes places of violence.  While not at the same rate as middle schools and high schools, violence does happen there.  

Overcome denial and prepare properly.

Deputies Placed on School Buses after Violent Incident

Bartow, FL

After a violent incident on a school bus in which a student was knocked unconscious by a "sucker punch" to the head, a Florida school district is placing off-duty deputies on 12 routes.  This is a temporary move to "guarantee the safety of kids".  Video of the incident.

Analysis
Placing deputies on school buses should be a short-term plan.  The school might also plan to exclude from the school bus those students who engage in violence.  In Indiana, and elsewhere, courts have ruled that school-provided transportation is not a right, but a privilege.  Check you won state laws and school policies to see if such is the case at your school.

The first step for many schools is to remember that the authority of the schools extend to the school bus, as well as the responsibility for keeping students safe.  Take some time and assess how your school is meeting that responsibility.  After all, school-transportation related fatalities are the number one form of death in K-12 schools (Satterly, 2014).

School Assault Data not being Properly Reported in Colorado

The Denver Post

This article was the first in a two-part series looking at the problems with the state's reporting system for school violence.

What do a rape at Kennedy High School in Denver, a boy stabbed with a metal ruler that had been sharpened with a pair of scissors, and a boy bloodying another in a fight have in common?  According to this article, none were reported to the state as required by law.

An investigation found that "the school safety information offered to parents lacks state oversight and varies wildly from one district to the next."  This includes incidents that the police would consider a felony.

Analysis
There are many reasons school administrators do not report violence.  Fear of being labeled a "persistently Dangerous school", fear of being wrong, and including abject ignorance of the difference between a misdemeanor and a felony.  It is even possible that some administrators think that they are protecting that child from being labeled by not reporting.  

The last is misguided and does a disservice to the other children in the school.  Of the other reasons, the abject ignorance is one that can be easily remedied.  Most law enforcement officers would be glad to provide an in-service to school staff as to what differentiates a misdemeanor from a felony. 

Schools are supposed to be a safe haven for children and staff.  If something happens that threatens the safety of the school or those in it, it is the duty of the the school staff to assess it, and notify law enforcement.  It may be nothing, but the school should allow the professionals to determine if it is something or not.  Schools, by and large, do not diagnose illness.  They report sickness to parents, and in severe cases, the public health department.  No less should be done for instance of school violence.

The skills needed for the initial assessment can be found in Staying Alive.

Saturday, May 17, 2014

Elderly Substitute Assaulted by Student

Houston, TX

A 15-year old student of Nimitz High School was arrested after assaulting an elderly substitute teacher.  The teacher had confiscated a cellphone from the student, and he repeatedly pushed her until she fell to the floor, whereupon he retrieved his phone.

Classmates recorded the assault on cellphone video.  The teacher was taken away by ambulance, but fortunately suffered only minor injuries.

Analysis
Schools and school district should take a hard look at the substitute teachers they have, their physical capabilities, and the types of classrooms in which they are placed.  While many schools are faced with teacher shortages, this will not be helped by stories like this. 

A school that has classrooms in which incidents like this can occur must begin work on improving their culture, and should start with a thorough risk assessment. 

Staying Alive teaches these skills for all areas of life, including schools.

Student Threatens School Security Officer

Cleveland Heights, OH

A sixth-grade student at Monticello Middle School was arrested after allegedly threatening to shoot a security officer in the head.

The boy cursed at a substitute gym teacher, and the security officer was summoned to take the boy to the office.  On the way to the office, the boy shoved the officer and made the threat.

Analysis
When hiring a security officer or SRO, care must be given to the skills they have.  Skills in deescalation are a must.  While they cannot prevent all situations, they can be used to prevent some of them, and can prevent situations that are occurring from getting worse.  The Crisis Prevention Institute (CPI) is an excellent resource for this type of training.

Deescalation skills can help you Stay Alive.

Thursday, May 15, 2014

Which First Responder Agency do You Trust in School Safety Planning?



Brian Gard is a colleague of mine. He works up in Michigan, where he helps maintain the safety and security of the schools in his care.

He recently sent me a question he got from one of his teachers:
"On pg. 12 in our School Crisis Response Team Plan it says that staff should, “close all windows and doors in your area of responsibility.” In this case we took everyone into our boys/girls restrooms because that is the safeties place in our building with no windows. When we had the local police department here last year for a Tornado Drill they had shared with me that we should not close the restroom doors because the people inside may get trapped. What they had shared with me is that if they are opened the police department/fire department can get to them much quicker in the case that a fire had started and or there were items pushed up against the door. So my question is, is it safe to close our restroom doors with people in them during a tornado?"

Brian was asking for advice, and I was glad to give it, as it leads to an important point.

Point #1: When preparing your school for tornadoes, it is best to consult with those who have expertise in that area. I would not go to the NOAA's Storm Prediction Center to ask for their help with Active Shooter Incidents, and I would not recommend going to the police for tornado sheltering advice. The local EMA and/or fire department would be a better way to go in this circumstance.

Point #2: I was happy to see that the school was coordinating with law enforcement. Schools would benefit from more of this coordination, as long as they ask the right people about the right topic.

Point #3: Closed doors improve the stability of the wall. The closed door also provides a barrier to the countless missiles that are created during a tornado.

Make sure you are coordinating your school safety efforts with local first responders, and make sure you are coordinating with the right people. That's how you can Stay Alive in schools.





Student Arrested for Threats of Violence on Twitter

Edmond, OK

A student at Santa Fe High School was arrested after the National Sentinel Program, a national watchdog group that monitors social media, reported a suspicious post to officials in Edmond.

The student allegedly tweeted  “I’m gonna shoot up the school if I fail the EOI,” and “I wanna tell my kids that I survived a school shooting and seem like a bad*** (expletive). So some white kid better shoot up the school or I will.”  The police investigated and decided the threats were not serious.

Analysis
Chapter 5 of Staying Alive covers warning signs of violence in both adults and children.  While schools must take all such threats seriously, a robust threat assessment process, including the use of multi-disciplinary threat assessment teams.

Wednesday, May 14, 2014

Canadian School Has School Safety Issues

Edmonton, Alberta, Canada

Brentwood Elementary, a school in Elk Island Schools, showed that school violence is not just an American problem.

A fourth grade student assaulted a teacher's aide.  That same student was allegedly in possession of a "hit list".  The school district met with parents, but were unable to share information wanted by the parents, due to privacy concerns.

Analysis
In Staying Alive, we make the point that school attacks are not limited to American schools.  They occur all over the world.  In fact, most people reading the above story without looking at the title would most likely assume they are reading about a U.S. school.

Tuesday, May 13, 2014

Student Assaults School Security Officer

Bainbridge Island Review

A security officer at Bainbridge High School confronted a student over a school violation, and the student allegedly assaulted the officer, causing minor injuries that required the evaluation of a medical professional.  The results of the evaluation will ultimately determine the severity of the charges.

Analysis
Schools that have security guards or School Resource Officers (SROs) should have written guidelines that outline their responsibilities, authority, and protocols for some of the more common occurrences they may face.

For SROs, search authority and the line between police powers and school authority need to be clearly defined.

While these may not have prevented the above situation, it can help protect the school from lawsuits following such an incident.

Monday, May 12, 2014

Are Zero Tolerance Policies the Answer to School Violence?

Detroit, MI

A teacher at Pershing High School was terminated after she broke up a fight in her classroom by swatting one of the participants with a broom.  The fight was very intense, with desks being knocked around, other students screaming, with no sign of ending anytime soon.

Tiffani Eaton, the teacher, attempted to intervene by swatting at the combatants with a broom.  Citing a violation of the corporal punishment code, the Education Achievement Authority, Detroit's school district for failing schools, terminated Ms. Eaton.  The two students were suspended, one for ten days, the other for three.

Ms. Eaton has retained an attorney, and she has a chance to appeal her termination in June.

Analysis
Best-selling author Mitch Albom weighed in on the situation, siding with Ms. Eaton.  I have also read several comments calling for a "zero-tolerance policy" on school violence.

I have looked, and I cannot find any research that shows such policies work.

In Staying Alive, we stress using research-based techniques, and techniques that are proven in the field, to prevent deadly encounters, or surviving them should they occur.  I would also stress this approach to school safety.

Zero-tolerance policies typically state that students who participate in student violence are given maximum punishments.  In this particular instance, a zero-tolerance policy would have seen both students engaged in the violence expelled.  What we did see is the teacher get fired, while the students returned.

To be fair, I do not know all the facts.  Watching the video, I personally do not see anything for which to fire the teacher.  She acted as best she could.  Perhaps the EAA could provide specific instruction to its staff on intervening in fights.  Giving the teachers the right tools to respond to such incidents can only help.

I do not know who was the aggressor in the fight, nor do I know what the facts were.  It's therefore difficult to blindly administer consequences, or render judgment on those consequences.

I do know I find this situation disquieting.

A 'Culture of Silence' for Teacher Assaults a Sign of a Bigger Issue?

Baltimore, MD

Jeff Slattery, a teacher at Baltimore Community High School, was brutally assaulted by a student, causing him to have his jaw wired shut for six weeks.  The Baltimore Sun conducted a records check of workman's compensation claims and found that nearly 300 claims were filed by school employees because of injuries received through assaults or altercations on the job.

Mr. Slattery believes a "culture of silence" exists in which school administrators do not report attacks, fearing a designation of "persistently dangerous school" which would result in negative consequences for the school.

Analysis
As a school administrator, I am always leary of such a claim.  Reporting a violent act, or even several violent acts, will not label a school as "persistently dangerous".  Repeated acts without positive action on the school's part will.  Schools are extensions of their communities.  If the school is located in a violent community, then it logically follows that violence may appear in the school.  The question is not whether violence appears in a school, but rather what steps has the school taken to prevent, mitigate, prepare, respond and recover from violence?

Edmund Burke once said, "In order for evil to flourish, all that is required is for good men to do nothing."  In regards to violence in schools, truer words were ne'er spoken.  As a person who works daily in the protection of children and those who teach them, I cannot, in good conscience, turn a blind eye to any evil done toward those in my care, neither can anyone else whose job is the protection of others.

In Staying Alive, we write about denial, a powerful negative drive to ignore the negative.  We have to overcome denial and face reality, or reality will force itself onto us.

Thursday, May 8, 2014

Alert State Trooper Saves Two Children using Staying Alive Technique

Hancock County, Indiana

An Indiana State Trooper pulled over a vehicle on Interstate 70 in Hancock County, just east of Indianapolis for a routine traffic stop.  It turned out to not be routine at all.

Two adults were in the front seat, and two juveniles were in the back seat.  Trooper Matt Wilson noted inconsistencies in the stories of the men and the two juveniles in the car. Wilson said he could sense "something was wrong".

"I could look at the kids in the back seat and tell that they were extremely in distress," Wilson said.

"One of the occupants said it was the driver's kids, and the driver said it was not his kids, it was some kids of a friend that he'd known. And when I had asked him who, what his friend's name was, he could not tell me because he did not know the name of the friend," Wilson said.

The two men were arrested for human trafficking, and the two children are in the custody of the Indiana Department of Child Services.

Analysis
Trooper Wilson used a concept described in Staying Alive called pattern-matching and recognition.  This term was coined by Dr. Gary Klein to describe how the mind recalls information during a crisis.  Our minds search through all of our memories, seeking to find a previous pattern that can be applied to the current incident.

It is a skill used daily by police officers, soldiers, firefighters and others who make decisions under duress.  Staying Alive breaks it down do that laymen and women can use the technique themselves to prevent, and respond to, danger.

Twitter Threat Locks Down Schools, Lead to Arrest

Safe Havens International

Yankton Schools in South Dakota were placed in a "partial" lockdown May 7 after police received a report of a threat made on Twitter.  A 23-year old male allegedly tweeted that he "felt like shooting up a school today.”

Officers were sent to every school in Yankton, and the police were able to arrest the suspect, charging him with terroristic threats.

Analysis
Police later discovered that the threatening tweet was posted on April 17, nearly a month before.  At the time, however, they acted as if the threat was immediate, which was proper.

Schools should already be in planning for how they will handle the numerous issues created by social media.  Threats, bullying, rumors.  The immediacy of social media means the problems they create will be immediate, and can quickly go "viral".  Have a plan in place for when that happens and the national media get wind of the incident.

Tuesday, May 6, 2014

Boy Beaten by Guardian in School Office

Safe Havens International

A 12-year old student got into trouble at Hale Junior High in Tulsa, OK, and his guardian was called to the school.

She was buzzed in while hiding an axe handle and some cable behind her leg.  Upon reaching the boy in the school office, she assaulted him with the axe handle and cable.  School police had to pull her off of the boy, who was left with welts and bruises on his arms.  The boy has been removed from the woman's home, and she was arrested and charged with felony child abuse.

Analysis
Without knowing all the facts in the case, it is unknown what level of training the office personnel had received in the use of their electronic access system.  It is important to note that visual weapons screening, and training in pattern-matching and recognition is a necessary addition to any training for electronic access.  Such systems are only as good as the people who implement them, and the training they receive.

Victims of Bullying More Likely to Bring Weapon to School

Red Orbit

A report presented to the Pediatric Academic Societies in Vancouver, Canada states that teens who have been repeatedly victimized are 31 times more likely to bring a weapon to school than those who have not been victimized.

Researchers used the 2011 Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System from the CDC to track if they had been harassed, and if they had brought a weapon onto school property.

Study author Dr. Lana Shapiro of the Cohen's Children Medical Center of New York, has called for greater efforts to reduce bullying in all of its forms.

Analysis
Schools should, as part of their security audits, include climate surveys.  They should particularly include students in these surveys.  If the student perception of safety is different than the staff perception, this could be a sign of a disconnect. Rapport -building with the student body can be instrumental in developing the trust between students and staff that can lead to information on dangerous behavior being brought to light before a disgruntled student makes a life-altering decision.
In the study, researchers reviewed information from the 2011 Youth Risk Behavior Surveillance System – a nationwide representative survey of greater than 15,000 US high school students carried out by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).
Read more at http://www.redorbit.com/news/health/1113138039/bullied-kids-bring-weapons-to-school-050514/#3o2lAYefSAk3qJ58.99
has confirmed that teens who have been picked on numerous times are as much as 31 times more likely to take a weapon to school than those who have not been victimized.
Read more at http://www.redorbit.com/news/health/1113138039/bullied-kids-bring-weapons-to-school-050514/#3o2lAYefSAk3qJ58.99
has confirmed that teens who have been picked on numerous times are as much as 31 times more likely to take a weapon to school than those who have not been victimized.
Read more at http://www.redorbit.com/news/health/1113138039/bullied-kids-bring-weapons-to-school-050514/#3o2lAYefSAk3qJ58.99
has confirmed that teens who have been picked on numerous times are as much as 31 times more likely to take a weapon to school than those who have not been victimized.
Read more at http://www.redorbit.com/news/health/1113138039/bullied-kids-bring-weapons-to-school-050514/#3o2lAYefSAk3qJ58.99
has confirmed that teens who have been picked on numerous times are as much as 31 times more likely to take a weapon to school than those who have not been victimized.
Read more at http://www.redorbit.com/news/health/1113138039/bullied-kids-bring-weapons-to-school-050514/#3o2lAYefSAk3qJ58.99

Monday, May 5, 2014

Keeping it Real

Reynoldsburg High School

First responders in Reynoldsburg County, Ohio conducted a full-scale exercise last week. The training exercise started with a bomb threat at a Reynoldsburg library.  Then, vapor was reported leaking from a suspicious vehicle near the high school. That was followed by an explosion in the parking lot. After that, a gunman forced his way into the school, shooting those in his path.

For several hours, first responders from about a dozen agencies in Reynoldsburg, Pickerington, Whitehall and Bexley, and Franklin, Fairfield and Licking counties cooperated to evacuate students, rescue victims and neutralize the threats.

Analysis
Students were present during the exercises, being exposed to the sights, sounds and chaos of the situation.  Whether students should be present or not is a topic for another debate.  What I would like to address is the exercise itself.

This blog is not about analyzing right or wrong in the above exercise, but to take a moment to share with schools what their exercise program should look like. 

FEMA and Homeland Security have established that a robust, progressive exercise program is best practice for emergency management, especially in schools.  Being progressive means that each type of exercise is preceded by another, with each exercise developing skills that build upon skills learned in earlier exercises.  There are various types beginning with the very simple, to the very complex, and increasingly hazardous.

For schools, any exercise program should begin with an orientation.  This is where all patrons are alerted to the various types of protocols their district has, and their role in those protocols.  This can be done in a classroom, using a lecture format.  Many schools do this at the beginning of the year.  Remember to document attendance, and to provide a similar orientation for substitute teachers.

Drills are used to practice a specific skill.  For example, an evacuation drill practices the act of getting students out of the building as safely and quickly as possible.  If you add additional skills to be practiced, it ceases to be a drill, and becomes an exercise.  Remember, drills focus on one skill.  What skill is being practiced requires assessment and planning.

Tabletop exercises are a low-stress way of practicing a developed protocol.  They can range from a formal type using multiple agencies, to scenario-based exercises that ask the important question, "What do I do when.....?" It is not necessary to hire someone to conduct a tabletop for you, as they are relatively simple to plan and execute.  If you do hire someone, make sure they are building internal capacity.  Take a hard look at vendors who insist on returning for "recertification".

Functional exercises are more complex, and introduce more stress through realistic messages.  For example, calling a school to deliver a bomb threat (Make sure they know it's coming!) and then having that person call 911 to report it trains the school personnel to react under simulated stress.  The scope is still relatively narrow, but operating correctly under stress increases confidence, and identifies issues with the protocol that may not have been identified otherwise.

Full-scale exercises should only be conducted after all protocols and procedures have been rigorously tested by prior exercises and drills.  They use full mobilization of resources, thus increasing the complexity and danger.  They are not something to just do to show everyone that you are doing something.  They require careful planning, preparation and communication with all stakeholders.

Information on Exercise Design can be found at FEMA's EMI Institute.  The courses are free, and well worth the time.

Friday, May 2, 2014

Staying Alive Companion Videos

Safe Havens International has created videos to go along with our book.  They expand upon the concepts in Staying Alive, and introduce you to some of the people who's stories you've read about.

Safe Havens International

Please take a look!

A link between social media and suicide clusters?

Indy Star

Last Monday, April 28, several students in Zionsville, IN re-posted a video of an eighth grade student posted on Google+ in which he discussed his thoughts on suicide.  On April 25, he hung himself.  The day after he died another Zionsville student attempted suicide by overdose.

Dr. Adelaide Robb, director of psychiatry research for the Children’s National Medical Center, said when teens see someone talk about suicide on social media — and go through with it — it can appear to give permission for others to do the same.

Therefore it's important for parents to be vigilant.  Katherine Kivisto, a University of Indianapolis professor of psychology, said suicide threats on social media are rarely a false alarm. They are a cry for help, and it's important for parents to know the signs and intervene in a timely manner.

Indianapolis psychologist Robbi Crain says, “The key thing in responding to those suicidal threats or talks is not to overreact, but also not to under-react.”

Drug and alcohol use, change in eating and sleeping habits, verbal or physical aggressiveness, loss of interest in activities they used to like, and physical symptoms, such as stomach aches, head aches and fatigue, can all be warning signs, according to the American Academy of Child and Adolescent Psychiatry.

"See something say something" is a Staying Alive mindset especially when raising, or working with, teenagers!

Frightening School Attack Plot Revealed

Safe Havens International

A chilling plot of a 17-year old high school student to kill his family and then attack his school was revealed May 1, 2014.  A concerned citizen noticed a "suspicious" person lurking at a storage facility and called the police.

A police officer responded and found bomb-making materials in the storage facility.  He arrested the teen.  The subsequent investigation uncovered horrifying details of what the teen hoped to accomplish.

The teen had a 180-page notebook with intricate details of what he was going to do, beginning with the murder of his family.  He was then going to set a fire in a field to distract first responders, and assault his school.  He was going to set off pressure-cooker bombs in the cafeteria, then use Molotov cocktails and guns to kill as many students as he could before SWAT took him out.

The investigation began in late March when three explosive devices were found on an elementary school playground, and culminated with the call from a concerned citizen.

In Staying Alive, we address the issue of the concerned citizen.  People often do not call the police for fear of being wrong, but law enforcement would rather look into a suspicious person or incident than to respond to a mass casualty incident at a school.

"See something, say something" is a mindset that can help people to "Stay Alive".

Teacher makes bomb threat

Safe Havens International

May 1, 2014

Michelle Smith, a teacher at Calhoun County High School in Jerseyville, IL, was arrested after a typed note was found in the school restroom.  The note threatened an explosion.  The school was evacuated, but no explosive device was found.

This is a good time to review your own bomb threat protocols.  Spring is often a time for students to make false bomb threats to get a break from class, and get some outdoor time.

Always take bomb threats seriously!  Take life-saving steps as found in the Window of Life, and call 911.