Anonymous ID: 4eae29 May 25, 2022, 4:59 a.m. No.16338076   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>8079 >>8088

Question:

 

What safety and security measures are used in America's public schools?

 

Response:

 

Schools use a variety of practices and procedures to promote the safety of students, faculty, and staff. The School Survey on Crime and Safety (SSOCS) collects data on school safety and security practices by asking public school principals about their schoolโ€™s use of safety and security measures, as well as whether their school had written procedures for responding to selected scenarios and whether it had emergency drills for students. SSOCS also asked schools about the presence of security staff and the availability of trainings for classroom teachers or aides on school safety and discipline provided by the school or school district.1

 

In the 2017โ€“18 school year, 95 percent of public schools reported that they controlled access to school buildings by locking or monitoring doors during school hours. Other safety and security measures reported by public schools included the use of security cameras to monitor the school (83 percent), a requirement that faculty and staff wear badges or picture IDs (70 percent), and the enforcement of a strict dress code (49 percent). In addition, 27 percent of public schools reported the use of random sweeps for contraband, 20 percent required that students wear uniforms, 9 percent required students to wear badges or picture IDs, and 5 percent used random metal detector checks.

 

Public schoolsโ€™ use of various safety and security measures differed by school characteristics during the 2017โ€“18 school year. For example, a greater percentage of primary schools than of middle schools required students to wear uniforms (23 vs. 18 percent), and both percentages were greater than the percentage of high schools requiring uniforms (10 percent); for schools that used the measures of controlling access to school buildings and requiring faculty and staff to wear badges or picture IDs, the same pattern of percentages by school level can be observed. In contrast, greater percentages of high schools and middle schools than of primary schools reported the use of security cameras to monitor the school, the use of random sweeps for contraband, a requirement that students wear badges or picture IDs, and the use of random metal detector checks. For instance, 65 percent of high schools and 50 percent of middle schools reported the use of random sweeps for contraband, compared with 8 percent of primary schools. The percentage of schools reporting the enforcement of a strict dress code was greater for middle schools (62 percent) than for high schools (56 percent), and both percentages were greater than the percentage of primary schools enforcing a strict dress code (43 percent).

 

https://nces.ed.gov/fastfacts/display.asp?id=334

Anonymous ID: 4eae29 May 25, 2022, 5 a.m. No.16338079   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>8088 >>8110

>>16338076

As school security increasingly becomes a major concern for stakeholders in the education sector, more measures are being explored to protect students and faculty. Schools have found success in controlling access to facilities during class time. In fact, over 95% of US schools follow this practice.

 

There are a number of ways to control access to the school using several technological methods. Three popular access control tools are:

 

Security access systems (electronic locks)

 

Visitor management systems (ID badges)

 

Vestibules (or kiosks)

 

Can these security measures work for your school? In this article, weโ€™ll discuss these 3 options in detail, including their features, cost, advantages, and disadvantages.

 

https://www.besafe.net/news/access-control-systems-that-improve-school-safety/

Anonymous ID: 4eae29 May 25, 2022, 5:10 a.m. No.16338123   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>16338115

>I challenge you to call every school in your local area and see if you can find a single school that you can just walk into. Pro-tip: You won't.

From journo Jim Stone: http://www.jimstoneindia.com/.zu0.html

 

A reader sent:

 

Jim, my youngest son (who is 19 years old now) went to elementary, middle and high school in TX. Three different cities.

 

By the time 2014 rolled around, ALL schools in our area had been retrofitted (and new schools designed with) buzz- in systems, where you could not walk into the school without being buzzed in by the front office. Parents would literally have to give their name, the name of their student, and the reason for their visit. You would sit outside and wait a couple minutes while the administration and staff verified that your student was a real student at the school.

 

Once inside, the only place accessible to any visitor was the front office. There was bulletproof glass and / or heavy locked doors leading to all other areas of the school, and this was at multiple schools throughout the years that my son attended. All schools were designed this way! It was done intentionally to stop mass shootings.

 

There is no way that in 2022 the shooter had access to a classroom.

Anonymous ID: 4eae29 May 25, 2022, 5:28 a.m. No.16338189   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>8201

>>16338157

>The school was being used as a polling place yesterday. Voters coming and going, door access opportunistic.

Post sauce.

 

>>16338097

>They found a school with easy access.

>>16338101

>โ€ฆwhich means this 18 year old kid didn't just get lucky and find an easy-access school by chance.

>>16338104

>Except the narrative is that he was on the way to the High School, wrecked his truck, was involved in a shooting with the cops and ran into the elementary. So your theory is not only stupid, but incorrect

>>16338114

>Soโ€ฆ.the shooter DIDN'T find a school with easy access? Explain :)

>>16338157

>The school was being used as a polling place yesterday. Voters coming and going, door access opportunistic.

Anonymous ID: 4eae29 May 25, 2022, 5:49 a.m. No.16338243   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>16338237

> he found a school with easy access (you)

false

> He found a school they were polling at (you)

false

> Ignores proof that they were 100% not using the school as a pooling place (you)

IP Hops

> Yes they were (you)

false

>I'm not the shill, you are (you)

false

Anonymous ID: 4eae29 May 25, 2022, 5:50 a.m. No.16338250   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>8252 >>8259

>>16338209

> they don't use schools as polling centers when there are children present.

 

>>16338242

>Polling stations can and do exist in some school locations. For a week at some places it was always after 6PM and in a very specific part of the school (like a gym). Members of the school are there to block off every other part of the school.

 

Notice how they keep ignoring "when children are present"

Anonymous ID: 4eae29 May 25, 2022, 5:52 a.m. No.16338252   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun

>>16338157

>The school was being used as a polling place yesterday. Voters coming and going, door access opportunistic.

>>16338199

>Yesterday was a school day, so you are claiming without sauce that they were using the school building during school hours as a polling place? Shill harder faggot.

>>16338207

>If a school is being used as a polling place that means ONE door is unlocked and its the one filled with poll workers and it is always in a room far away from the kids. So that doesn't make sense.

>>16338209

>It's complete bullshit, they don't use schools as polling centers when there are children present.

>>16338216

>Texas does in fact use schools as polling places. But as I said, its always WAY away from the kids.

 

>>16338224

>I don't know about right now but in Ca. they sure use to. Also in churches with nursery schools active.

>>16338225

>Yes, they do, shill.

>>16338242

>Polling stations can and do exist in some school locations. For a week at some places it was always after 6PM and in a very specific part of the school (like a gym). Members of the school are there to block off every other part of the school.

>>16338250

>Notice how they keep ignoring "when children are present"

Anonymous ID: 4eae29 May 25, 2022, 6:01 a.m. No.16338274   ๐Ÿ—„๏ธ.is ๐Ÿ”—kun   >>8278 >>8298

>>16338269

>>16338268

So an untrained 18 year old had a $50,000 F250, ~$6000 worth of gear when counting armor, optics, weapons, ammo. Got into a shoot out with cops, gained entry into a school he hadn't planned on going to originally, killed the school liaison officer, gained access to the children, executed 18 kids + teacher, and was subsequentially taken out by an elite border patrol officer.

 

If you believe this I want to sell you all my LUNAUSD for for $2 a piece.