Georgia's second-largest school district allows non-officers to carry
guns
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[July 16, 2022]
By Randi Love
(Reuters) - Georgia's second-largest school
district has approved a policy to allow personnel who are not certified
police officers to carry guns, part of its response to the shooting at a
Texas school that killed 19 children and two adults two months ago.
The Cobb County school board voted 4-2 at a meeting on Thursday to adopt
the policy as a way to bolster the number of staff carrying guns at a
time when finding new police officers is difficult. The policy would
exclude teachers from carrying guns.
Employees authorized to carry guns would get the same training as
certified school resource officers.
It was not clear whether the suburban Atlanta district intended to hire
new security personnel who were not police officers, or if it would use
existing employees for the role.
During the meeting, opponents of the policy booed and shouted, “Delay
the vote," demanding a more detailed discussion take place at an Aug. 18
meeting before the board made a final decision.
Superintendent Chris Ragsdale said final approval for any personnel
would lie with the school board's police chief, Ron Storey.
Representatives of the superintendent's office were not immediately
available for comment, and members of the board who voted on the policy
could not be reached.
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Guns are displayed after a gun buyback event organized by the New
York City Police Department (NYPD), in the Queens borough of New
York City, U.S., June 12, 2021. REUTERS/Eduardo Munoz/File Photo
In Uvalde, Texas, police took more than an hour to
intervene when a gunman entered Robb Elementary School and opened
fire in a classroom. The delayed response has sparked national
debate regarding the law enforcement response in Uvalde, as well as
over the risks and benefits of arming staff at schools to help
protect schoolchildren.
A 2014 Georgia state law enables school districts to set policies to
arm teachers and other staff, but only a handful have done so since
the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting in Parkland,
Florida, in 2018, Ragsdale said.
The state school board did not immediately respond to a request for
the number of districts that have allowed armed teachers in
classrooms.
Before the vote, Ragsdale said the district, with 107,000 students,
currently has nearly 70 officers stationed among its 114 schools.
“If the board gave me a blank check and said go hire a school
resource officer for every school in Cobb County, I could not do
that," Ragsdale said.
(Reporting by Randi Love in New York; editing by Jonathan Oatis)
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