School safety has taken on a whole new meaning
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Marisa O’Neil
School safety used to mean knowing how to hide under a desk or get
out to the athletic field.
Today, it means dealing with threats ranging from a gun-toting
student to a chemical attack.
Orange County school and law enforcement officials discussed the
problems of preparing for the unknown in a school safety community
forum at UC Irvine on Monday.
“It may not be a matter of ‘if’ [something happens],” said Sara
Kaminske, manager of safety and emergency preparedness for the Orange
County Department of Education. “It may just be a matter of ‘when.’”
Representatives from the Orange County Department of Education,
Sheriff’s Department and risk management companies discussed ways to
deal with threats from nature, students and terrorists. UCI’s Center
for Unconventional Security Affairs, which integrates people from the
public and private sectors to research and address a variety of
threats, presented the forum.
While all Orange County schools hold drills to prepare for fires
or earthquakes, they should also have other contingency plans, said
Orange County Supt. of Schools William Habermehl. If an earthquake
damages the school and 1,000 students can’t reenter it, for example,
or if it starts raining after an evacuation, school administrators
should have a plan.
“Don’t assume you have all the answers,” Habermehl said. “Play
‘What If ... ?’”
Homeland Security is also a concern for school districts. Schools
represent “soft targets” -- ones not fortified with extra security --
for terrorists, said Alon Stivi, president of Direct Measures
International, which provides security analysis and safety education.
Terrorists’ greatest weapon is fear, he said, which makes schools
attractive targets.
Stivi recommended that schools form Crisis Response Teams on
campus. In an emergency, they would coordinate plans and direct first
responders to any problem areas in the school.
Speakers from the Orange County Sheriff’s Department talked about
their safety measures, including the School Mobile Assessment
Resource Team, a SWAT-like unit trained for rapid response in school
emergencies.
“Kids don’t learn if they’re frightened or worried about safety,”
Orange County Sheriff Mike Carona said. “Parents don’t send kids to
school if they think they won’t come back.”
The Sheriff’s Department has coordinated with the Capistrano
Unified School District to put school information on a computer
network. Officers responding to a school emergency can access campus
maps, 360-degree views of some areas, photographs of staff and find
out where to shut off utilities.
In Newport-Mesa, the greatest risks are earthquake, flood or
tsunamis, said Arthur Cummins, Orange County Department of Education
crisis response network coordinator. Terrorists could also
potentially target bridges in Newport Beach, preventing speedy
evacuation, or could contaminate the water in the bay.
TeWinkle Middle School Principal Jeff Gall, who attended the
forum, said he works with school resource officers from the Costa
Mesa Police Department to formulate plans for evacuation, lockdown
and reunification. After attending the forum, he said that he would
coordinate with officers to apply some of the new ideas.
“To us, the biggest threat is the unknown,” he said.
* MARISA O’NEIL covers education. She may be reached at (949)
574-4268 or by e-mail at [email protected].
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