Locking Down a Classroom Increasing Demands
Increasing demands call for immediate sense of security
- By Mike McCoy
- Sep 01, 2013
According to the Bureau of Justice Statistics,
during the 2009-10 school year
alone, 85 percent of public schools in
the United States reported that one
or more incidents had taken place
on campus, amounting to an estimated 1.9 million
crimes. This translated to a rate of 40 crimes per 1,000
students enrolled in a public school.
In response to the increasing number of gun-related
incidents and violent crimes occurring in schools
nationwide, school districts are looking for more efficient
security and access-control measures. To combat
these dangers and protect students and faculty, a
comprehensive element of security solutions are available,
ranging from biometrics identity management
systems and emergency notification devices to monitoring
technologies and full perimeter access control
options, all aiming to eliminate the threat of and prevent
violent intruders from setting foot on campuses.
However, as students, parents and staff make
increasing demands for a more immediate sense of
security and peace of mind, solutions often appear
costly to administrators and security directors as
well as difficult to implement in a timely and effective
manner.
The Intruder Function
Many school district administrators and superintendents
have started opting for a highly cost-effective
product that has been on the market for approximately
20 years to better secure classrooms during the threat
of intruder and emergency situations. Used to equip
classroom doors, the feature is commonly referred to
as an “intruder function,” though many manufacturers
have their own respective nomenclature.
The intruder function eliminates a major point of
classroom vulnerability by enabling teachers to discretely
lock the exterior lever, or thumb piece, from
the inside, should they hear or be warned of a disturbance
directly outside the classroom or in the hallway.
Essentially, teachers and staff are able to lock the
exterior of the door without opening it, while the
interior lever, or exit device, can remain unlocked, providing
safe egress if needed. In doing so, the teacher
draws little attention to the students in the room while simultaneously increasing the level of classroom security.
The intruder function offers substantial
security at a low cost with minimal
installation time, allowing schools
to take preventative actions against violent
situations quickly and effectively.
This single component offers the following
to provide an effective response
to breached security crises in education
facilities:
- easy to operate, requiring minimal
effort;
- adds to classroom security, with
minimal change to the existing door
hardware installation;
- available as an orderable option to
common exit devices as well as cylindrical
and mortise lock platforms;
- offered in a wide variety of finishes
to accommodate the respective application
environments; and
- can be keyed to fit the specific lock
or match existing door openings
throughout the facility.
Because of these characteristics, the
procurement rate has been on the rise
in many school districts as this function
is being applied to classrooms, libraries,
study halls and common areas
of student learning in schools across
the country. For instance, after the notorious
shooting at Columbine High
School in Littleton, Colo., in April
1999, manufacturers saw a significant
rise in districts purchasing this option
in Colorado school districts.
Many educational facilities throughout
the United States feel that the minimal
upcharge and installation effort is
a small price to pay when considering
the immeasurable value of the added
security provided. To that point, many
communities have now made the intruder
function a requirement for their
respective classroom applications.
Pittsburgh Public Schools
Most recently, in what is considered
one of the most significant moves to
improve school security in Western
Pennsylvania, the board of Pittsburgh
Public Schools voted unanimously in
late April of this year to approve the
purchase and installation of 4,400
Best locks with the intruder function
from Stanley Security in all 59 schools
and early learning centers within the
district. This decision was part of the
school district’s response to the Sandy
Hook Elementary School shooting in
Newtown, Conn. that claimed the lives
of 26 students and adult staff members
on Dec. 14, 2012.
“I applaud any school board that is
willing to take additional steps to provide
for the safety of their students,”
said Donald Smith Jr., emergency planning
and response management coordinator
at the Center for Safe Schools
in Camp Hill, Pa. “As much emphasis
as we place on students succeeding academically,
that success is only possible
when students are learning in a safe and
secure environment.”
Virginia Schools
A rural, K-12 public school district,
located approximately 35 miles northwest
of Richmond, Va., chose to install
Best locks with the intruder function
by Stanley Security in keeping with its
continuous efforts to enhance and upgrade
security on all of its campuses.
The district currently consists of
six schools, including one high school,
one middle school and four elementary
schools, with students enrolled in pre-K
through 12th grade programs. The district
also has an alternative education
center for students at both the middle
and high school levels, and the high
school is equipped with an extensive career
and technical education department
with access to a Governor’s School.
The school district, which views the
safety of its students and faculty as a
top priority, has ramped up security efforts
over the years in order to secure
all entryways, school common areas,
hallways and classrooms in the best,
most cost-effective ways possible.
“When planning for security enhancements
in any educational setting,
it’s important to always take into account
currently-installed security, budgets,
time frames, down-the-road compatibility
and future security goals set
by school leadership,” said John Johnson,
end user consultant for Stanley
Security. “First and foremost, though,
is landing on a single function, such as
locks with the intruder function or a
comprehensive solutions package that
will immediately augment student and
staff safety.”
Stanley Security introduced and installed
the locks with the intruder function
in this Virginia public school district
in 2010. Since then, this school district
continues to implement this solution as
well as other security features in all new
buildings, upgrades and projects.
Northside Independent School District - Texas
The Northside Independent School
District (NISD) in San Antonio, Tex., a
premier school system comprised of 71
elementary schools, 18 middle schools
and 15 high schools, adopted the Best
locks in 2002, installing approximately
15,000 to 20,000 locks in their new facilities.
Since then, the district has converted
their locks to include the intruder
function to better protect their population
of approximately 100,000 students
along with 12,500 faculty and staff.
“The decision to install locks with
the intruder function in the NISD
school environments was made by our
Facilities Department more than 10
years ago, in response to all the shootings
that were being reported around
the country at that time,” said Vince
Flores, building trades manager of
maintenance and operations at NISD.
“And, years later, we believe we made
the right decision to include them in all
our new facilities in order to ensure the
safety of our students and faculty. The
intruder function has been a great addition
and investment to our district with
about a 99 percent success rate. Our
goal in the future is to convert all NISD
campuses to the intruder lock function
and intruder exit devices.”
Creating a Secure School
This nation is challenged daily with media
broadcasting the violence that has
encroached upon the safety and lives of
our children, teachers and supporting
faculty. In the face of such realities, as
the ones that have occurred at elementary,
secondary and higher education
facilities across the country, including
those incidents that have lent to the unfortunate
infamy of Columbine High
School, Virginia Tech and Sandy Hook
Elementary School, every additional
security measure that can be taken to
better guard classroom environments
from unauthorized persons and intruders
is a must. The intruder function
proves its value as a trusted, significant,
access-control feature that cost-effectively
protects with little disruption to
existing door hardware.
“Security measures and practices
are designed to slow down an intruder...[
and] every moment that you can
delay an intruder to allow time for law
enforcement to arrive can save countless
lives,” said Brett Bontrager, senior
vice president and group executive at
Stanley, during a hearing earlier this
year before the House of Representatives
Committee on Education and the
U.S. Workforce. “Certainly, no single
lock or system is the answer. Each
school district should ensure that its
school buildings and grounds undergo
a site evaluation, a risk assessment
and [that] a long-term, comprehensive,
security roadmap is developed.”
“Upon completion of the site evaluation
and risk assessment, decisions must
then be made on the level of security
needed. By levels of security, I am referring
to security products that range
from essential hardware and mechanical
access equipment, such as door hardware—
which includes intruder locks
and master key systems—to wireless
situational awareness monitoring and
every solution in between. Each district
can work within their own specific
needs, considering their budget as well
as the local rules and regulations.”
For security directors, facility managers,
school board members and parents
in any school community knowing
that such a simple, effective and
practical solution exists and can be
installed easily in the classroom with
minimal door preparation and restructuring
offers incredible comfort.
“I know we can all agree that keeping
our children safe in their schools is
worth all of our time, all of our collective
experience and all of our wisdom,”
Bontrager said.
Although installing the intruder
lock function in schools may not be the
only step to ensure safe learning environments,
it’s a considerable and simple
action that can pre-empt an emergency
and potentially save lives.
This element of classroom security
equipment truly sells itself; the feature
is a long-standing, trusted solution that
directly addresses the fears and concerns
every parent has when dropping his or
her child off at the school’s front doors.
Installing locks with an intruder function
in learning facilities is an essential, proactive
measure to help
prevent tragedy.
This article originally appeared in the September 2013 issue of Security Today.