New Year, New Fear: Students Return to Schools with Beefed-Up Security Post-Uvalde
As districts nationwide bolster police in schools, a Florida sheriff plans to equip campus cops with collapsible rifles strapped to their chests
By Mark Keierleber | September 12, 2022As children in Brevard County, Florida, shopped for notebooks and pencils for the upcoming school year, Sheriff Wayne Ivey geared up to 鈥 as he called it 鈥 鈥渨in the battle.鈥
Just two days before students returned to classes at the coastal district east of Orlando, Ivey plans to equip his team of school-based deputies with collapsible rifles strapped to their chests. The move was a direct response to the mass school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, which resulted in the deaths of 19 children and two teachers and brought a tragic end to the last school year. Now, as students file back into classrooms across the country, this back-to-school season has come with a heightened focus on school security, with districts increasing the presence of police, installing new and, in one district, bringing in a gun-detecting dog.
Ivey took the back-to-school security rush further than most, arguing in the video that 鈥渋f you do not meet violence with violence, you will be violently killed.鈥
To help campus cops fight back against any would-be gunmen, Ivey announced that his department with collapsible stocks. Kel-Tec, a Brevard County-based firearm manufacturer, says semi-automatic 9mm rifle 鈥減icks up where handguns leave off,鈥 utilizing a folding carbine with 鈥渕ore pistol magazine options than a cat has lives.鈥 The weapons retail for about $600 each.
鈥淪un Tzu says in The Art of War that every battle is won or lost before it is ever fought,鈥 said Ivey, a group of extremist law enforcement officers with . 鈥淲hat Sun Tzu meant was that you must outsmart, out strategize, outtrain and out prepare your opponent long before the battle is ever fought.鈥
Mass school shootings have long motivated efforts to bolster the ranks of campus cops and school security, yet as the tragedies continue unabated, there鈥檚 little evidence to suggest the strategies are effective in mitigating or preventing bloodshed. Ben Fisher, an associate professor at the University of Wisconsin whose research focuses on the intersection of education and criminal justice, questioned the efficacy of rifle-toting school resource officers and other school-hardening measures.
鈥淚t seems to me like yet another overreaction to the issue of gun violence in schools, one that feels like putting a Band-Aid on a problem that keeps happening rather than addressing the source,鈥 Fisher said.
In Uvalde, a close-knit, predominantly Hispanic town still reeling from the May rampage, to buildings with 8-foot 鈥渘on-scalable鈥 perimeter fences, new surveillance cameras and upgraded doors and locks after the security apparatus at Robb Elementary School was criticized for a fatal collapse at multiple levels. Meanwhile, the state Department of Public Safety in Uvalde schools at the district鈥檚 request.
The changes come after a into the Uvalde shooting found 鈥渟ystemic failures and egregious poor decision making,鈥 including a culture where doors were routinely left unlocked and a disorganized, chaotic police response. In total, 376 law enforcement officers from the local, state and federal levels 鈥 many of them heavily armed 鈥 descended on the campus but failed to subdue the gunman for more than an hour, a delay that may have cost lives. Last month, the Uvalde school , the disgraced chief of the district鈥檚 tiny police force, and officials 鈥渋ntruder detection audits鈥 at every district across Texas. Last week, state officials announced an investigation into the actions of five Texas Department of Public Safety officers who responded to the shooting, two of whom have been suspended.
The school security rush this summer stretched across every corner of the country. In Ohio, lawmakers passed a policy that allows teachers to carry guns in class after just 24 hours of training. In Marion County, Florida, the sheriff鈥檚 office 鈥 a German short-haired pointer that was trained to sniff out firearms and ammunition on campuses. At America鈥檚 largest school district, in New York City, officials last week and training of additional unarmed school safety agents and enhance emergency preparedness training for school leaders. It also conducted audits of 1,400 campuses, identifying some 1,300 issues with security features like door locks, panic buttons and public address systems, pledging all would be fixed when schools opened Sept. 8.
In late June, President Joe Biden signed into law the nation鈥檚 first new gun control measures in 30 years, which include an additional $300 million in federal grants for campus security while also allocating more money for student mental health services.
Meanwhile, Ivey said the in-your-face weaponry being deployed in Brevard County Schools was meant to send a message, offering a 鈥渢actical appearance that clearly signifies that we mean business.鈥
Yet, the rifles were nowhere to be found on students鈥 first day of school on Aug. 10. Activists with the local group Families for Safe Schools surveyed parents from across the county about whether they鈥檇 seen school-based officers with the new rifles and 鈥渟o far it鈥檚 been a resounding no,鈥 said Jabari Hosey, the group鈥檚 president and a father of three elementary school-aged children in the district.
鈥淚t鈥檚 just a joke,鈥 said Hosey, who favors armed police in schools but believes the move to equip them with rifles is a step too far. 鈥淗e put the cart before the horse. Apparently they don鈥檛 have all of the equipment they need.鈥
In an interview, sheriff鈥檚 office spokesperson Tod Goodyear acknowledged the rifles hadn鈥檛 yet been implemented but will 鈥減robably roll out in stages.鈥
鈥淚t may have been announced out a little bit before everything was really ready,鈥 said Goodyear, who blamed the delay partly on the need to train deputies on how to use the weapons. 鈥淎ll of the rifles weren鈥檛 produced and all of that, so that may be a little bit of the holdup.鈥

鈥Do something鈥
The rush to harden schools post-Uvalde is, in many ways, the continuation of a decades-long trend. Mass school shootings 鈥 which are devastating but statistically rare 鈥 have consistently prompted increases in school-based police and security infrastructure.
School security and policing measures generally see widespread support from the public. A recent poll by the education nonprofit PDK International found a resounding 80% of adults favor the presence of armed police in schools, including 94% of Republicans and 70% of Democrats.
Whether such efforts make kids safer, however, remains a contentious debate. Existing research 鈥渄oes not, as a whole, yield support for school policing as an effective strategy to improve safety and security,鈥 the National Institute of Justice, the Department of Justice鈥檚 research arm, . Similarly, there鈥檚 a dearth of research to suggest that school hardening efforts have made schools safer, of security technology by researchers at Johns Hopkins University. As the tragedies generate headlines and fierce political debates, local education officials often face significant pressure to act 鈥 often on quick timelines.
鈥淚f horrific enough, these incidents can lead to increases in funding with a short spending window,鈥 the Johns Hopkins report notes. 鈥淭his curbs the ability of districts to conduct even limited evaluation and frequently results in the purchase of technology to demonstrate a strong commitment to 鈥榙oing something.鈥欌
The school security industry was with business growth largely dependent on the frequency and severity of mass school shootings, according to a recent report by the market research firm .
While armed police have become a regular presence in U.S. schools, officers are generally equipped with pistols, a reality their proponents argue leaves campus cops at a tactical disadvantage during active shootings. That has led to a push, in Brevard County and elsewhere, to fight firepower with firepower. Leading supporters of school-based police say the development is necessary to ensure officers aren鈥檛 out-gunned, but critics say it鈥檚 the latest escalation of school militarization and could put students at greater risk of harm.
The collapsible stock on the rifles being deployed in Brevard County schools puts the deputies 鈥渙n par with what we鈥檙e facing,鈥 without being overly cumbersome, sheriff spokesperson Goodyear said. Goodyear went a step further in contemplating the everyday drawbacks to arming school police with heavy weaponry, including AR-15s, the assault-style rifle favored by many mass shooters.
鈥淯nless you go down to a submachine gun, maybe you could carry that, but then now you鈥檙e talking about putting an automatic rifle into somebody鈥檚 hands,鈥 Goodyear said. 鈥淏ut with an AR-15 or along those lines of that type of weapon, it鈥檚 a fairly large weapon and the only way you can carry it is on a sling over your shoulder. It鈥檚 not practical, your hands aren鈥檛 free, it鈥檚 going to get in the way.鈥
In Madison County, North Carolina, the sheriff found a compromise, AR-15 rifles in safes at each of the county鈥檚 six campuses 鈥 a move that gun control advocates 鈥渁bsolute insanity.鈥 But Sheriff Buddy Harwood said the semi-automatic rifles were critical to keep kids safe.
鈥淗aving just a deputy armed with a handgun isn鈥檛 enough to stop these animals,鈥 Harwood said in . With the AR-15s, 鈥渕y school resource officers will not have to wait, retreat or have to leave the situation to get the weaponry to deal with the threat.鈥
The approaches in Brevard and Madison counties each have pros and cons, said Mo Canady, executive director of the Alabama-based National Association of School Resource Officers.
鈥淚鈥檓 not sure that, as a society, we鈥檙e generally ready to see law enforcement officers on a consistent basis walking around with a long gun strapped onto one shoulder鈥 while patrolling school hallways, he said. Storing rifles in safes gives school-based police additional weaponry during an active shooting 鈥 but only if they have a chance to retrieve them. While he opposes giving school-based officers an 鈥渙verly militaristic look,鈥 he said a collapsible rifle like the Kel-Tec could be a 鈥渉appy medium鈥 if it鈥檚 鈥渘ot something that鈥檚 sticking out there obvious all of the time.鈥
But he said that rifles, which are generally more accurate than pistols, could grow more common as schools continue to be confronted by heavily armed gunmen.
鈥淚f you have to take a shot in a school environment,鈥 he said, 鈥測ou鈥檇 darn well better hit your target.鈥

鈥楢 militarized vibe鈥
Kel-Tec markets its collapsible SUB2000 rifle for its convenience, noting on the company website that 鈥渋t tucks away nicely in situations where space is limited, but it鈥檚 quick to deploy in situations where time is of the essence.鈥
But the same features that could make it an attractive option for school-based police could be exploited by mass shooters. In fact, the weapon has already made an appearance at . After a gunman opened fire on an Independence Day parade in Highland Park, Illinois with an AR-15 style semi-automatic rifle, authorities found the suspect also had . Last year, a student at Daytona鈥檚 Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University 鈥 just 60 miles north of the Kel-Tec headquarters in Cocoa 鈥 was to 鈥渆nact a Columbine鈥 on campus. When police stopped the suspect outside his apartment, he reportedly had a SUB2000 concealed in his backpack that he鈥檇 recently purchased on Facebook Marketplace.
Kel-Tec executives didn鈥檛 respond to requests for comment.

Hosey, of the Brevard Families for Safe Schools group, said he generally supports school-based police, but he and other parents were caught off guard when the sheriff announced the new Kel-Tecs.
鈥淚t gave us a militarized vibe,鈥 he said, and could lead students to fear their school resource officers because people often associate heavily armed police officers with active-shooter situations. 鈥淲hat we don鈥檛 want is kids to see this and assume that they鈥檙e in danger and that there鈥檚 an imminent threat.鈥
When asked about the presence of rifles in Brevard County schools, district spokesperson Russell Bruhn said in an email that 鈥渢he sheriff鈥檚 office is our security expert,鈥 and declined to comment further.
School-based police have long been positioned as members of school communities who foster positive relationships with students. But having a rifle so visibly present on deputies鈥 chests sends 鈥渕essages about aggression and the potential for violence when we know that violence in schools, especially with guns, is exceedingly rare,鈥 said Fisher of the University of Wisconsin.
In fact, there鈥檚 a lack of research to suggest that a school shooting was particularly fatal because campus police lacked 鈥渕ilitary weaponry,鈥 said attorney Miriam Rollin, a director at the National Center for Youth Law. Despite the police failures in Uvalde, she said the push to arm school-based officers with rifles is just the latest escalation in campus hardening and isn鈥檛 a far leap from 鈥渢anks going down school hallways.鈥
鈥淕enerally with an arms race, nobody wins,鈥 Rollin said. 鈥淚 have to say, this is no exception.鈥
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