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School Officials Reject Idea of Arming Teachers at Safety Meeting

However, law enforcement and school district officials said a meeting of the Safe Schools Partnership Program Thursday morning produced meaningful discussions on other ways to prevent a repeat of the tragic school shooting in Connecticut last week.

 

UPDATED 1:15 p.m.-

Law enforcement and school district officials said a meeting of the Safe Schools Partnership program Thursday morning produced meaningful discussions about ways the two groups can work together to improve safety at St. Louis-area schools in the wake of last week’s tragic shooting in Newtown, Connecticut.

Both the Manchester Police Department and Town and Country Police Department had officers at Thursday's meeting. (Town and Country also provided Patch with information on the Safe Schools Partnership and how schools and poice prepare for a school intruder situation, which has been posted in the "comments" box below.)

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“It was a very frank and open conversation between law enforcement and school officials about what can we do, what else can we do,” St. Louis County Police Department Chief Tim Fitch said in an interview with Patch after the meeting, which involved police departments and school districts from across the St. Louis area.

Fitch made national headlines earlier this week when he put forward the idea of arming school officials as a way of deterring future mass shootings. School leaders at Thursday’s meeting, however, failed to embrace the idea.

“The school officials here overwhelming reject that idea, which was no surprise,” he said. “There were a couple of hands that were raised when I said who was interested pursing that idea, but just a few. At this point, I don’t suspect we will have this conversation again about arming school officials until the next school shooting.”

Instead, Fitch said school officials were interested in implementing improved training on actions teachers can take when there is an active shooter in their building, threat assessments of individual buildings to identify security vulnerabilities and putting police officers in area elementary schools.

“That was their main interest,” he said, of the last option. “But their main concern about doing that is how are we going to pay for it?”

The idea of asking voters to approve a specific tax that could fund an added police presence was discussed as well, but Fitch said asking for tax increases is always a “significant hurdle.”

The St. Louis County Police immediately increased its presence at the elementary schools it provides security for following the massacre and Fitch said “that is not going to stop.” This will involve random visits to schools and walk-throughs along with having an officer present at the beginning and end of the school day.

Desi Kirchhofer, Deputy Superintendent with the Parkway School District, said after the meeting that they had no specific plans yet on funding additional school resource officers. Instead, he said the focus will be on working with the St. Louis County Police district and other law enforcement agencies to maintain this increased presence.

The meeting took place at the Parkway School District Instructional Services Center in Creve Coeur and was itself not open to the public. 

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Related Topics: Newtown, Police, School, School Shooting, Security, St. Louis, Tim Fitch, and parkway school distriict

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Gabrielle Biondo

1:17 pm on Thursday, December 20, 2012

Town and Country police sent this response in an email to Patch referencing the Safe Schools Partnership program: "...area law enforcement and school officials didn’t wake up on December 15th and suddenly realize we needed to prepare for an incident as tragic as Newtown. The reality is we have been preparing for responding to, and preventing if possible, such incidents since Columbine occurred in 1999. The Safe Schools Partnership has been an active organization for years with regular meetings to help ensure the safety of our schools. The last meeting was as recent as November 7th where the agenda included drug abuse issues and a presentation on ALICE (Alert Lockdown Inform Counter and Evacuate) concept. In its simplest form ALICE is a five step process that schools can utilize during an intruder incident. ALICE, while not a total solution, allows school officials to tailor their actions based on options available to them during an intruder incident. Law enforcement has been training aggressively for years to respond to armed intruder incidents and St. Louis is probably more advanced in this area than most metropolitan areas."

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