Safety & Security
The Best Decision
The process of educating
children in the Los Angeles Public
School System was brought to a
halt by an anonymous threat. Some were
quick to condemn the district’s actions.
However, as the district’s chief of police correctly
and professionally responded, those
critics did not have to bear the burden should
children or staff die due to a bad decision. As this case shows,
anonymous threats against schools have become increasingly
difficult to address. Many people are experiencing
higher levels of anxiety due to government
cautions indicating increased risks of
terrorism combined with a series of terrorist
incidents. When combined with the emotive
and intensive media coverage of terrorist
attacks and school shootings, it is now much
easier for a single individual to cause alarm via
the Internet or even a simple note scrawled on
a restroom wall. There are strategies that can
help campus officials respond more effectively
to these challenging situations.
Enhance your ability to quickly discuss
a threat with representatives from local law
enforcement, fire and emergency management agencies. An
increasing number of school districts have purchased systems
which allow web conferences so key personnel can meet rapidly
in a virtual manner to work together when they cannot assemble
rapidly in person. While people tend to focus on law enforcement
for these situations, many types of incidents have aspects beyond
law enforcement expertise. An important example of this would be
a threat pertaining to hazardous materials. Be sure to include the
additional key disciplines of the fire service, public health department
and either emergency management or homeland security
offices in your community.
It can be extremely valuable to conduct tabletop scenarios for
several different types of situations. Local and state emergency
management personnel can often script facilitate and evaluate
tabletop exercises for key administrators, school security or
police department personnel and representatives from area public
safety agencies. Working through a series of scenarios in limited
amounts of time for each can be particularly helpful. In our
experience, this leads to faster and higher quality decisions. Your
team will make better decisions faster if they have had a chance to
practice as a team in real-time fashion.
Focusing not only on the credibility of the threat, but also the
best tactical responses of the threat can be important. There have
been attacks where aggressors have communicated threats that
were intentionally designed to appear to be a hoax before carrying
out an attack. This type of attack occurred in London many years
ago. Terrorists taped their call to the police and then sent the tape
to the media after people were killed in a bombing. Poor quality
bomb threat protocols contributed to this
situation. We still regularly see very outdated
response plans for an array of attack methodologies,
especially as we have become so fixated on
mass casualty shootings.
I also find it to be helpful to periodically run
a series of easy to conduct simulations with the
personnel who craft your messages to inform
parents of threat situations via your emergency
notification system (ENS). Schools today usually
have an excellent means to rapidly push out
messages. However many do not take the time
to conduct timed drills so the people who craft
and send out the messages are better prepared
do so more effectively and rapidly. This is easy to do and can really
improve the quality and speed of getting appropriate messages out
to the community should a situation involving a threat occur.
It can also be helpful to periodically re-evaluate your plans to
make sure that certain key areas are well covered. For example,
your plans should have separate and distinct protocols for chemical,
biological and radiological incidents. Many school crisis plans
lump these together even though there are significantly different
action steps that are appropriate for each. In some cases, plans do
not even have protocols for these difficult and potentially deadly
situations.
Taking the time to develop a strategy for addressing anonymous
threats can lead to improved decision making. The stresses
of limited information, resources and time make some of these
situations difficult to address under the best of circumstances.
Developing and practicing a multi disciplinary threat evaluation
and management approach can prove to be invaluable for these
difficult and stressful situations.
This article originally appeared in the issue of .
About the Author
Michael Dorn serves as the executive director for Safe Havens International, Inc., an IRS-approved, nonprofit safety center. He has authored and co-authored more than 20 books on campus safety. He can be reached through the Safe Havens website at www.safehavensinternational.org.