Texas School District OKs Pistols For Staff
Hat tip to Vehement for the link to the story:
Friday August 15, 2008
HARROLD, Texas — A tiny Texas school district may be the first in the nation to allow teachers and staff to pack guns for protection when classes begin later this month, a newspaper reported.
Trustees at the Harrold Independent School District approved a district policy change last October so employees can carry concealed firearms to deter and protect against school shootings, provided the gun-toting teachers follow certain requirements.
In order for teachers and staff to carry a pistol, they must have a Texas license to carry a concealed handgun; must be authorized to carry by the district; must receive training in crisis management and hostile situations and have to use ammunition that is designed to minimize the risk of ricochet in school halls.
Superintendent David Thweatt said the small community is a 30-minute drive from the sheriff’s office, leaving students and teachers without protection. He said the district’s lone campus sits 500 feet from heavily trafficked U.S. 287, which could make it a target.
“When the federal government started making schools gun-free zones, that’s when all of these shootings started. Why would you put it out there that a group of people can’t defend themselves? That’s like saying ’sic ‘em’ to a dog,” Thweatt said in Friday’s online edition of the Fort Worth Star-Telegram.
Thweatt said officials researched the policy and considered other options for about a year before approving the policy change. He said the district also has various other security measures in place to prevent a school shooting.
“The naysayers think (a shooting) won’t happen here. If something were to happen here, I’d much rather be calling a parent to tell them that their child is OK because we were able to protect them,” Thweatt said.
Texas law outlaws firearms on school campuses “unless pursuant to the written regulations or written authorization of the institution.”
It was unclear how many of the 50 or so teachers and staff members will be armed this fall because Thweatt did not disclose that information, to keep it from students or potential attackers. Wilbarger County Sheriff Larry Lee was out of the office Thursday and did not immediately return a phone call seeking comment, the newspaper said.
Barbara Williams, a spokeswoman for the Texas Association of School Boards, said her organization did not know of another district with such a policy. Ken Trump, a Cleveland-based school security expert who advises districts nationwide, including in Texas, said Harrold is the first district with such a policy.
The 110-student district is 150 miles northwest of Fort Worth on the eastern end of Wilbarger County, near the Oklahoma border.




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Woo hoo! My first hat tip!
Lftbhndagn you popped my cherry. lmao!
God bless Texas!
August 16th, 2008 at 11:00 amI took firearms safety classes years ago and it was the best thing I’ve ever done. Besides learning the right posture and hand technique for holding a gun, I learned that what goes up must down. Hollywood movies that show actors firing alleged live rounds into the air aren’t realistic at all because people get hurt that way! Every time I see a a Muslim firing his AK-47 into the air, I wonder how many villagers are carried out on stretechers afterwards.
August 16th, 2008 at 11:01 am“The 110-student district is 150 miles northwest of Fort Worth on the eastern end of Wilbarger County, near the Oklahoma border.”
What the hell are they afraid of, Comanches attacking?
BTW make sure the local cops get the memo. Responding to a school, they will shoot the first person they see with a gun.
August 16th, 2008 at 11:50 amdadeo…. find Harold on the map before posting, I hear google works. The town is 20 to 30 minutes from any law enforcement help if ANYTHING happens in that school. They even keep school busses on hand to evacuate the school in case of chemical spill from the rail tracks nearby. I applaud them for being proactive in addressing this issue, instead of waiting for a tragedy to happen, then to do the finger pointing dance. In the parlance of force protection, they have just added a level of complexity to a criminals plan, and the criminals may just go somewhere else. BTW, some of the children in the high school probably have more safe trigger time than some police departments.
August 17th, 2008 at 5:55 am