Wednesday, July 31, 2013

Arkansas School District Will Arm Teachers and Staff

Slate

An Arkansas school district is taking a page straight from the NRA's playbook, arming more than 20 teachers and staff members this fall in response to what administrators say was an overwhelming number of complaints from parents worried in the wake of Sandy Hook Elementary tragedy. Here's the Associated Press with the details from Clarksville (pop. 9,200), located about a 90-minute drive from Little Rock:
[M]ore than 20 teachers, administrators and other school employees in this town ... will carry concealed weapons throughout the school day, making use of a little-known Arkansas law that allows licensed, armed security guards on campus. After undergoing 53 hours of training, [the] teachers at the school will be considered guards. ...
In strongly conservative Arkansas, where gun ownership is common and gun laws are permissive, no school district had ever used the law to arm teachers on the job, according to the state Department of Education.
According to the National Center for Education Statistics, the Clarksville School District had the full-time equivalent of just shy of 360 staff members (including 175 classroom teachers) in its five individual schools during the 2011-2012 school year, the most recent available data from the center. While the district isn't saying which staff members will be armed, a little back-of-the-envelope math suggests that there will be an average of more than four adults carrying a concealed weapon in each of the schools, the largest of which was Pyron Elementary School, which had a total of roughly 650 second-, third-, and fourth-graders at last count. (Or, if you prefer to breakdown concealed weapons by student, the math works out to about one armed adult for every 125 kids.)

3 comments:

  1. Replies
    1. Texas Is as well, some Texas schools have had armed teachers and personnel for decades.

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  2. "That teacher is going to respond to one thing and one thing alone, and that's someone is in the building either actively or attempting to kill people," Jon Hodoway, director of training for Nighthawk. "That's it. They're not going to enforce the law. They're not going to make traffic stops. If somebody is outside acting the fool, they're going to call the police."

    http://amarillo.com/news/national-news/2013-07-30/ark-district-arming-more-20-teachers-staff

    We have been trying the run and hide technique for a while and its working, not so good.

    ReplyDelete