gearguy10 wrote:I hate to add to this mess, but I feel the need to throw in my two cents since I work in the very trenches you speak of. I teach high school in a suburban district and I will tell you as a gun owner/collector/carry permit holder you don't want want to add handguns to the mix by letting teachers carry on the job. If you do support this idea you have A. a whole lot of faith in your fellow man and B. selective memory of your high school experience. Many teachers can't keep track of their keys or ID badges and many are in no physical shape to take any kind of evasive action. For crying out loud, when fights break out we're told not to intervene (for the record, I do anyway but have been injured) and many teachers will just walk away. As for the students, do you remember your friends and classmates in high school? If I had a gun on my hip, a quarter of my students would be trying to figure out how to steal it from me, a quarter would be trying to figure out how to pull some kind of prank and plug the barrel or something, a quarter wouldn't want to talk about anything other than guns and we'd get nothing done, and the other quarter would refuse to come to class because they're scared of me.
The best move we ever made was to hire retired police officers as security. They love working with the kids and the kids love talking to them and hearing their stories. They know how to handle the tough situations and can identify potential problems and deal with them. It was a win win for both parties.
The problem is a mental health issue. We live in a society that values innocence until proven guilty...and we hesitate to label someone nuts until they do something to prove it. I had a kid just last week look me in the eye and tell me he was going to shoot me. Suffice to say, he has protection from being removed from school because an expert determined at some point that he has a disability and doesn't really understand what he says. So, they have a quick meeting of the minds and determine he didn't mean it and he's back in class an hour later with a big poo eating grin on his face.
I don't think we need guns in schools to protect the students and staff. We need a system that allows the removal and isolation of those who would do harm to schools or any public place. We know who they are. We just spend way too much time and energy trying to protect them instead of us.
Just saying...
congrats and well said sir.