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Active Shooter Training Strongsville

Tuesday, February 26, 2013

Active Shooter Training: 'Not in My House'

Police show teachers, school staff how to take control over someone with a gun

  The days of hiding quietly in a room, waiting to be rescued from a gunman are over. Strongsville police are now training teachers and school staff -- and the public in general -- how to stand up to a shooter in a building, if no other choice is available. "You have options," Deputy Chief Mark Fender told about 50 staff members at Kinsner Elementary School last week, the fourth Strongsville school to receive active shooter training. Fender encouraged teachers to have a plan, starting with how to evacuate kids to safety. If that's not possbile, hide the children in a classroom and barricade the door with desks and chairs and call 911. Then a twist: Find something to use as a weapon and position yourself at the door, ready to attack. "These…

AJK

6:53 am on Wednesday, February 27, 2013

The school district needs to allow teachers to be armed. Do you honestly believe that someone who has never experienced the sounds or sights of gun fire that they are actually going to stand there and begin to throw things. children will never do that they will always run or hide. They teach people to evacuate when there is a fire. Why would you not evacuate with gunfire. barricade yourself in …   more ›

Thursday, February 21, 2013

Teachers Get 'Active Shooter' Training

Strongsville police are visiting each school to teach staff how to handle someone with a gun

  Strongsville police are going into each school in the district to train teachers and staff in new methods of handling an active shooter. Police Chief Jim Kobak said the department has conducted intruder alert drills in the schools for years, but is introducing new techniques aimed at giving staff more power. "Never before have we asked teachers to engage a shooter," Kobak said. "Now we're giving them an option -- if you're faced with no other choice, you can go ahead and attack that intruder." The training includes drills and officers firing blanks for added realism, as well as to teach teachers to distinguish between different types of weapons. Superintendent John Krupinski said he spoke with employees at one of the first schools to …

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Ken McEntee

10:31 am on Thursday, February 21, 2013

Lyn. I agree. Many law enforcement experts have been telling parents for years - this could be life or death. Screw the bureaucracy. Instruct your kids to get the hell out of the building if at all possible and run like hell. In fact, there was a report last year by a former cop and tactical training expert called the "Parent's Guide to School Shootings," which was highly critical of the accepted…   more ›

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