to prevent school shootings, Jeffrey Woofter, the superintendent of West Virginia鈥檚 Barbour County school district, is not one of them.
Woofter, a former sheriff, does not think that all school personnel should be armed.
But he believes that trained staff鈥攖eachers, administrators, or custodians鈥攕hould be allowed to carry concealed weapons or have access to concealed weapons on campus.
That would make schools much safer鈥攏ot more dangerous鈥攁nd allow school officials to respond faster in the case of a school shooting, and ultimately save lives, he said in an interview. West Virginia law bars firearms inside schools unless the person is a certified law enforcement officer.
Budgetary constraints have prevented the districts have putting school resource officers in all of its seven schools. While there are resource officers at the high school, local officers regularly visit the middle schools, they are not permanently stationed there, said the superintendent, whose district is located about 120 miles from Pittsburgh.
鈥淪chools are just sitting ducks because people know that you are not permitted to carry in schools, and that just makes them vulnerable,鈥 Woofter said.
President Trump made the proposal about possibly arming teachers on Wednesday after meeting with school shooting survivors and parents. Last week鈥檚 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., which left 17 dead, has been followed by a clamor for more gun control measures.
The president鈥檚 proposal was panned by . Some to do their jobs. Others threatened to quit. And who spoke with 澳门跑狗论坛 reporter Evie Blad pushed back on the idea.
Trump clarified his remarks on Thursday, saying that he supported allowing trained staff, such as those with military backgrounds, to carry guns.
In 15 states, districts can allow select personnel to carry concealed loaded guns in schools.
The Toppenish School District in Washington state, for example, adopted a policy the local PBS station KTCS 9 reported. 澳门跑狗论坛 and News Hour correspondent Kavitha Cardoza reported in December
Lori Lowe, the superintendent of the Morgan Local School District in McConnelsville, Ohio, who supports arming educators, told Cardoza that student safety was her primary concern. It can take up to half an hour for police to respond to some schools during an emergency in her rural school district, she said.
A 鈥楲ine of Defense鈥
Woofter, the West Virginia superintendent, stressed that any move to arm school staff should require extensive training and certification, and the staff cannot be mandated to carry, he said.
鈥淚 don鈥檛 think you can safely put a weapon on someone who is not comfortable having it and using it if need be鈥攈eaven forbid,鈥 he said.
Woofter鈥檚 thinking is informed in part by his career in law enforcement鈥攈e served two terms as the elected sheriff in Hancock County before going into teaching鈥攁nd by 2015 incident that occurred at the district鈥檚 Philip Barbour High School just days into his first school year as a superintendent.
, but a teacher and the local police department were able to talk down the student without any physical injuries or fatalities.
While the teacher did a 鈥渉eroic job,鈥 things could have ended differently if the student had started firing upon entering the school and school officials had to wait five minutes for the police to arrive, he said.
He said he did not want to turn schools into fortresses with metal detectors at every entrance. And he also knew that even with significant firearm training police still make mistakes.
But having some school officials who were prepared to respond in emergencies makes sense, he said.
鈥淚 would feel more comfortable if I knew there were trained people in a school building, that no one knows they are armed, just in case a tragic situation starts to unfold,鈥 he said. 鈥淎t least there would be some protection鈥攁 line of defense鈥攚hich doesn鈥檛 exist right now.鈥
As an additional deterrent, schools could display warning signs that the premises were protected by personnel carrying concealed weapons, but the identity of those carrying the weapons would not be revealed, he said.
And while Woofter is supportive of having trained, armed educators on campus, he doesn鈥檛 plan to spearhead such an effort in West Virginia.
鈥淏ut I鈥檇 absolutely lend my support to it,鈥 he said.