May 25, 2012


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Ready to Respond

Mar 1, 2011 12:00 PM, By Mike Kennedy (mkennedy@asumag.com)

Schools and universities should have crisis teams in place to respond immediately to emergencies.

As recent headlines have shown, schools and universities are not immune to deadly violence, and institutions must have plans in place to quickly handle any possible scenario.

Just after the beginning of the year, a student brought a gun to his Omaha, Neb., high school and fatally shot an assistant principal. A month later, a quarrel erupted on the campus of Middle Tennessee State University and a student allegedly shot and wounded a former student.

One doesn’t have to search very far to find incidents of life-threatening violence at schools and universities throughout the nation—let alone tragedies away from campuses such as a gunman’s January attack outside a Tucson, Ariz., grocery store that left six dead and Congresswoman Gabrielle Giffords seriously wounded.

These shootings are the latest to serve as reminders to education administrators that campuses are not immune from deadly violence and that schools and universities need to have comprehensive plans in place to identify and prevent potential trouble and minimize the harm when attacks do occur.

A key strategy in preparing education communities for the possibility of a crisis on campus is creating an emergency preparedness plan and establishing a crisis intervention team—also known as an incident management team (IMT).

The U.S. Department of Homeland Security has put together a guide that sets out the best practices for establishing an IMT at education institutions.

"IMTs provide administrators with immediate access to trained teams to assist in the management of incidents at schools," the guide says.

The department says that no formal standards exist regarding the number of people on an IMT because the makeup "depends on the size and type of school, the expertise of the members and the expected threats." Typically a principal will organize and lead a school-based IMT and a superintendent a district-based IMT.

"Safety experts recommend that school administrators work to establish IMTs at both the individual school and the district level," the department says. "While individual school IMTs are able to respond sooner to incidents, district IMTs typically have access to more resources."

Valuable expertise

Faculty and staff members can provide valuable expertise as members of an IMT. Among the instructors that should be considered as part of the team:

•Biology teachers may be able to help identify potential health hazards and know what protective actions to take in response to biological hazards.

•Chemistry teachers may know safety procedures related to hazardous material spills and have access to material safety data sheets with information about specific chemicals.

•Coaches have knowledge of athletic fields that may be needed as evacuation sites. Many coaches and physical education instructors also are trained in first aid, cardiopulmonary resuscitation and use of automatic external defibrillators.

•Special-education instructors may have knowledge of safety requirements and precautions that are needed to keep students with disabilities and special needs safe.

Other staff members may have expertise that warrants their inclusion on an IMT. For instance:

•Administrative assistants can help answer phones and identity people who do not belong in a school facility. They also may be the most qualified staff member during an evacuation to help preserve essential school records.

•Bus drivers may be aware of transportation hazards and can help coordinate the transportation of students and the evacuation routes that will be used.

•Cafeteria workers may be able to identify foodborne illnesses and help with safe food-handling procedures. During an extended emergency, they can help distribute food and water.

•Custodians and maintenance staff may know which chemicals, mechanical equipment and other supplies are stored in a school facility. They also can inform emergency responders of building specifications and how a facility’s fire alarm and sprinkler, ventilation and utility systems function.

•Counselors have the expertise to provide psychological assistance for students and staff during and after a crisis.

•Nurses can provide medical assistance and may be able to identify health hazards.


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