Is any place safe?As kids head back to class, schools rush to install the latest
security measures. Here's one of the bestBy S.C. Gwynne/Odessa
August 17, 1999
Web posted at: 10:03 a.m. EDT (1403 GMT)
When students went back to school last week at Permian High in
Odessa, Texas, they wondered what had happened to the place over
the summer. Gone was their old wide-open campus, now surrounded
by a security fence with controlled entry points and clusters of
surveillance cameras. Inside the school, they had to wear
bar-coded photo-ID badges, and in many classrooms, "black boxes"
with mirrored eyes stared implacably down from the walls, above
signs that read, IT SHOULD BE ASSUMED THERE IS A CAMERA INSIDE
THIS ENCLOSURE RECORDING VIDEO AND AUDIO.
What had happened was that Permian, like thousands of other
schools alarmed by recent campus shootings, had responded by
clamping down on all sorts of security problems, from fights to
theft, vandalism, graffiti and intruders. In an approach not
unlike urban police clampdowns of recent years, schools have
tried to create a new environment of conspicuous order and
security. What school administrators, parents and students worry
about most are potential copycat gun crimes, especially after it
was revealed last week that T.J. Solomon, 15, accused of shooting
six classmates last May in Conyers, Ga., had referred to the
Littleton, Colo., shootings in a note left under his bed. And
last week's armed assault on a suburban day-care center in Los
Angeles only heightened the sense that every place is vulnerable.
As a result, students returning last week to Allen High School in
suburban Dallas found four new permanent, airport-style metal
detectors and a sign (apparently not vetted by the English
department) that reads WELCOME TO ALLEN HIGH SCHOOL. UPON
ENTERING THESE PREMISES ALL CARRY-IN ITEMS ARE SUBJECT TO SEARCH.
In Orange County, Fla., students who wanted lockers or parking
permits for their cars had to sign a waiver agreeing to random
searches of both and stating that they "waive any expectation of
privacy." Instead of an old-fashioned fire drill, a high school
in Williams Bay, Wis., carried out an extraordinarily dramatic
exercise in the hope of showing students, teachers, police and
paramedics what to do in case student gunmen storm the school:
explorer scouts, dressed in camouflage and carrying rifles loaded
with blanks, pretended to shoot the principal and take hostages.
Few schools, though, have tightened their security as thoroughly
as Permian High. It has formed an alliance with Sandia Labs,
based in Albuquerque, N.M., which has three decades of experience
in locking down top-secret facilities that manufacture, transport
and store nuclear weapons. Sandia started advising schools on
security in 1991 after Congress ordered the labs to share the
wealth of its technologies. Yet protecting a nuclear facility,
says Sandia analyst Mary Green, is in some ways easier than
securing a school. "Nuclear weapons usually stay where you put
them," she says. "They don't have a lot of civil rights, and they
rarely stick six of their friends into their Camaro to go eat
lunch at Taco Bell."
The Sandia folks have learned fast. By 1992 they were employing
"hand-geometry" readers at a New Mexico elementary school. These
machines, which record the unique features of each human hand,
were used to ensure that children were picked up from school only
by an authorized person. In 1996 Sandia mounted its first major
overhaul at the high school in Belen, N.M. Using a combination of
video cameras, drug-testing kits, metal detectors, mobile
Breathalyzers, ID badges and antigraffiti sealants, Sandia
engineered a 90% drop in vandalism and theft, a 98% decrease in
campus intruders, 95% fewer car break-ins and 75% fewer fights.
Permian would like to see similar results on its 2,200-student
campus. Like Belen High, it's a relatively safe school. But its
administrators know that their counterparts in Littleton and
Conyers thought the same of their schools. At Permian, Sandia is
using both low tech and high tech. Student identification badges
will not only immediately show who belongs and who doesn't but
also contain bar codes school administrators can instantly scan
to show everything from previous tardiness and truancies to
medical records. (The badges can be used to buy lunches and check
out library books too.) Visitors receive high-tech badges that
are good only for a day and fade to blank thereafter.
Outside the school, new perimeter fencing and cameras help
control and monitor access to parking lots. Inside, tiny wireless
cameras in black boxes will monitor classrooms. To safeguard such
valuable school property as TVs and vcrs, Sandia has implanted
each appliance with coded microdots that contain the name of the
school and a serial number, which makes equipment easier to
identify and recover. For the first time this fall, Permian will
deploy drug and alcohol test kits, drug- and explosives-sniffing
dogs and portable metal detectors for random searches.
Ironically, all this comes amid statistical signs of an overall
decrease in school violence. A recent study published in the
Journal of the American Medical Association showed a 30% decline
from 1991 to 1997 in the number of students carrying weapons to
school and a 14% decline in student fights. During the past
school year, according to the U.S. Justice Department, there were
about half the number of school-related violent deaths as there
were six years earlier. So how does this square with Littleton
and Conyers? In recent years, violence has declined from
relatively high levels in inner-city schools, which for years
have employed metal detectors and other security precautions. But
school violence, and measures to deal with it, are moving out to
the suburbs.
Not everyone accepts that all this is warranted. "Over this
summer, we have had school boards putting together the most
restrictive policies we have ever seen," says Diana Philip,
director of the a.c.l.u. of Texas for the northern region, which
has filed several suits against schools. "A lot of them are in
clear violation of the Fourth Amendment, which guarantees freedom
from unreasonable searches." Before police can legally search
someone, they generally must have "probable cause" to believe the
person has committed a crime. But courts have recently given
schools wide leeway in searching lockers, cars and backpacks and
administering drug tests even on a random basis. Permian High
administrators, for example, periodically seal off hallways,
order students to drop what they are carrying, then run the
purses and backpacks through metal detectors.
Private security companies say they have never seen so much
demand for their services by schools, which has some wondering
whether chronically fad-driven school administrators aren't
overreacting. Says Kenneth Trump, president of National School
Safety and Security Services in Cleveland, Ohio: "We tell people
to calm down and think. There has been an explosion of overnight
experts and charlatans. Schools are hiring all sorts of people
with no expertise in school security." It's understandable,
though, given the recent headlines, that principals and boards of
education would rather be accused of going too far than have to
explain someday why they didn't do everything they could--even
hire the guardians of the nation's nuclear weapons--to help
prevent a bloody incident at their schools.
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Cover Date: August 23, 1999
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