Current state law requires schools to conduct at least one safety-related drill per month, including summer months when school is in session with students. These drills must teach students three basic functional drill responses:
Schools must document the date, time, and type of each drill and maintain the documentation in the school office.
Lockdown drills may not include live simulations of, or reenactments of, active shooter scenarios that are not trauma-informed and age and developmentally appropriate.
PRO: Active shooter drills can leave students and staff feeling upset, terrified, and traumatized, especially if the drill is unannounced. This type of drill can increase feelings of depression, anxiety, and fear of death. Drills are important, but if they are not implemented correctly, they will cause harm. Drills should prepare not scare. This bill requires active shooter drills to be trauma-informed and age-appropriate. Simulations should happen at higher grade levels because it is good practice, but families and students should be notified of the drills and have the choice of whether to participate. A lot of money has been spent on school security, which means less money for school nurses, guidance counselors, and academic enrichment. The focus on hardening schools distracts from policies that will work like stricter requirements for safe storage of firearms, more mental health counseling, and better threat assessments.