As schools and colleges increasingly
become targets for threats and attacks, they face the security challenge
of maintaining a welcoming and open environment while ensuring the
comprehensive safety of the students, teachers and staff. Recent
high-profile school tragedies, such as those in Sandy Hook and San
Bernardino, have only emphasized the need for educational facilities to
maintain an effective and thorough security system and a coordinated
incident management plan.
One of the first steps a school can take
to work toward achieving this goal involves receiving a safety
assessment from a security consultant. This process will often analyze
two factors: the methods a school is using to actively protect and
secure the campus, and the incident and communication plan a school has
in place.
Through this assessment, educational
facilities are able to determine what areas of their existing physical
security systems are functioning properly and what pieces could use
improvement.
Each technology component of a school’s
security system, such as surveillance cameras, access control devices
and emergency communication methods, are reviewed.
During the initial assessment, there are
four main points of contact for a security consultant when examining a
school or college campus:
- The IT director. It’s critical to examine a school’s technology setup and network infrastructure to determine how they function before assessing its security posture. Knowing this information can help a consultant make recommendations on best practices for using existing technology or ideas for other technology investments that can be integrated and layered on.
- The administration. The superintendent, assistants and principals play an important role in a security consultation. These personnel are often part of the immediate response during an emergency and can explain the school’s existing response protocol.
- Teachers and educators. It’s necessary to discuss emergency response with the people who will more than likely be involved immediately around an incident as it happens.
- First responders. Although the last point of contact, first responders are one of the most important pieces for the safety of a school. Law enforcement and medical, fire and emergency responders must understand and be aligned with a school’s security system and emergency management protocol.
Consultants often conduct a physical, practical assessment to determine how a school’s perimeter can be hardened.
The overall safety goal for school security officials is protection of the entire environment that students are learning in.
Below I address four common school safety issues and give an appropriate solution should an emergency occur.
Problem 1: Incomplete Visitor Management
One key security problem facing schools
is creating safe visitor management systems by bridging the gap between
freely allowing parents and visitors into a school while properly
monitoring unknown guests.
There’s a false sense of security in most
schools today because existing visitor management protocols at most
campuses only run a visitor’s name against a sex offender database in
that state.
This may be the only type of security a
school is concerned about, and therefore no other information is
obtained about the visitor, but validation must extend beyond this basic
assessment.
Additionally, some schools don’t have
check-ins at all entrances, allowing visitors to walk directly to where
students and educators are located without being identified first. Most
schools also do not require a check-out policy, allowing visitors to
stay on campus unaccounted for.
Solution: Geofence
Security in the education environment
must lean toward setting up geofences around campus. These virtual
geographic boundaries can be integrated with other access control
technology to allow security officials and administrators to use mobile
devices to easily identify individuals entering and exiting the
perimeter.
Geofences can also immediately create
alerts when a known inappropriate individual, such as a sex offender,
has entered the predetermined area.
Problem 2: Unorganized Incident Response
While schools and colleges may have an
emergency management plan ready, it is almost always in hard copy format
and therefore not utilized, oftentimes causing the actual response to
be chaotic and uncoordinated.
There are many moving pieces involved in
responding to an emergency, and they can easily become scattered. First
responders, for example, often arrive on the scene without being
properly briefed on the situation or knowing where exactly on campus the
incident is occurring.
If certain areas need to be blocked off
or parents are arriving to pick up their children, orderly communication
is necessary to avoid taking away from valuable response time.
Solution: Real-time Communication System
The message that goes out to students,
parents and first responders during an emergency, and the way first
responders receive critical information, must be immediate and
informative.
Real-time location system (RTLS)
technology allows first responders to see into an event as it unfolds
and gives educators and administrators the ability to communicate to
first responders with real-time information.
Existing emergency protocols in schools
and colleges can and must be made to work immediately, and communication
methods must be chosen carefully: a public address (PA) system may
cause heightened concern, and walkie-talkies are outdated and prohibit
broadcasting.
SMS and chatting via smart devices is the best and most effective mechanism of communication during an emergency.
Problem 3: Lack of Security Technology and Consolidation
As mentioned above, a school’s IT
director is a security consultant’s first point of contact, and for a
good reason: If a school possesses security technology (and not all do),
it tends to be scattered throughout the premises, with each piece
operating as a separate entity in a siloed approach (and that’s assuming
that all the technology is fully functional).
An educational facility may claim to own
numerous video surveillance cameras, but not all may be working or
placed in optimal locations. In the aftermath of an emergency incident,
recorded video may need to be accessed by law enforcement, but schools
typically lack sufficient video management software or video analytic
capabilities.
Solution: Integrated Technology System
Although it’s a general rule that each
type of security technology has its own intellectual property and isn’t
necessarily made to connect with one another, it can and should be done
through a single integrated solution.
Nowadays, collaboration is key when it
comes to ensuring comprehensive protection and, in an educational
environment, all devices must be pulled into a unified dashboard in an
effort to regulate security and properly manage emergencies.
High resolution, strategically placed
surveillance cameras, video management technology, access control
features and all other security systems need to be layered into the same
network to be used conjunctively at all times.
Problem 4: Inadequate Technology and Incident Management Training
Simply putting the above three solutions
in place won’t help a school’s security unless the teachers,
administrators and staff know exactly how to use them.
Because emergencies naturally cause fear
and stress, unfamiliarity with the proper processes will only make the
situation worse. Time is of the essence during occasions like these, and
it cannot be spent searching for a physical safety manual or asking
others what to do.
A school may have created an outstanding
emergency management plan to be coupled with their robust security
technology, but these components are only valuable in knowledgeable
hands.
Solution: Practice and Uniform Comprehension
All employees of a school or university
must work together and put in the time and effort to properly understand
the school’s security measures and emergency processes.
Each staff member should first be briefed
on the school’s visitor management policy and geofence usage, and then
practice makes perfect. Tabletop exercises, those that simulate a
real-life event with stressors that can be replicated, must be performed
internally twice a year, and external tabletop exercises involving law
enforcement and first responders should be practiced once a year.
Additionally, communication during
training is critical. Every individual should fully recognize the chain
of command, who’s responsible for what and how different types of
emergencies will be handled.
By obtaining a security assessment and
combating frequent campus safety concerns, K-12 schools and colleges can
strike a balance between an inviting atmosphere and a secure, prepared
educational facility.
Incorporating geofences into an existing
security system to create a strict visitor management structure can save
lives, and facilitating real-time communication within an incident
management plan can help mitigate risks and streamline response
operations.
Combine these solutions with updated, integrated security technology and the only thing left to do is practice.
Through a clear designation of tasks and
processes, teachers and staff should be fully prepared to effectively
react should an emergency occur.
Source:
https://www.campussafetymagazine.com/emergency/4-solutions-to-incident-management-challenges-at-schools/
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