Today at a local school, probably 30 minutes from my front door, a student walked into school carrying what he said was a bomb. The child was a freshman, was 14 years old, and seemed confused and agitated. It will probably be weeks before anyone knows what his motives were.
Fortunately, disaster was averted, as the school, with a population of 1700 students, was evacuated and the “bomb” did not go off. Whether it was a real bomb or not, has not been disclosed. He surrendered a few hours later.
While I do not keep my children in my presence at all times, I truly fear sending them into a high school building with a couple of thousand children in a time of shootings, bomb threats and massacre.
To add to the deplorable and uncontrollable things that happen in local schools is incidents like last week’s rash outbreak at a middle school that is still unexplained. Today, after the school was closed for 2 weeks and thoroughly cleaned, some unknown substance is still affecting children.
When I researched moving here to GA, and chose the county and city I did choose, had school crime been reported accurately, I probably would have chosen to live some place else. However, the reports being what they were, I settled here and put my children in public schools only to find that they were in constant danger, and that danger was horribly under reported. To prove I am not making this up, read this:
An August 26, 2005, story in the Atlanta Journal Constitution highlighted a federal audit citing three Georgia school districts as underreporting school crimes required to be reported under the “persistently dangerous school” law requirement. The report identified incidents including felony drug and weapons offenses, a terrorist threat and an aggravated battery that were not included on the systems’ reports. The report claims that one district failed to report 28 misdemeanor drug incidents and three felony drug incidents.
schoolsecurity.org
My district was one of those that under reported school crimes.
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