Panel Urged To Add Classroom Locks
NEW BRITAIN — A Connecticut panel reviewing school security standards following the Newtown massacre was urged to keep their solutions simple and focus on adding door locks for classrooms and communication devices.
“Every teacher must be armed with the most basic defense,”' Ron Chivinski, a Newtown Middle School teacher and union leader, told members of the School Safety Infrastructure Council at a meeting Thursday, August 8.
He suggested that classroom doors be retrofitted with locks that can be used from both the inside and outside, allowing teachers to lock down a classroom without opening the door to a hallway where an intruder may be present.
Jeff Leake, vice president of the Connecticut Education Association, said teachers in his union have said it’s important for them to know what is going on inside their school. They think there should be a good way to inform teachers of an intruder without alarming students. Mr Leake said some schools use special lighting as a notification system.
The hearing at New Britain High School marked the council’s fourth meeting. It was the first one held to gather input from the people who spend much of their time inside schools.
Panel chairman Donald DeFronzo, commissioner of the Department of Administrative Services, said the safety and security standards the group ultimately recommends will be applied to new school construction as well as renovations and retrofits of existing buildings.
Mr DeFronzo said the recommendations ultimately will be costly and the council wants to make sure that any standards it recommends or requires will be effective. Connecticut has about 1,300 public schools, and the state currently spends about $500 million to $600 million a year on school construction and renovation, which amounts to about 30 projects.
Even the new door locks suggested by Mr Chivinski and others could be an expensive proposition.
“We’re not talking about going down to Home Depot and buying a $25 [door lock],”' said Richard Camelich Jr, superintendent of Regional School District 7. He said they could cost hundreds of dollars per door.
The council has until January 1 to recommend to several state agencies and legislative committees new standards to improve or enhance security and safety in Connecticut schools. The council was created by legislation passed after the December 14, 2012, shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
Members are examining a variety of safety measures, including the feasibility of reinforcing entryways and using ballistic glass, solid core doors, computer-controlled electronic locks and buzzer systems. The group also is looking into using security cameras on school grounds.
In past reviews of school safety, experts have told lawmakers there was nothing that could have fully prevented Newtown shooter Adam Lanza from blasting his way into the school. But they have stressed the importance of trying to slow down an intruder.