Page 16 - Campus Security & Life Safety, January/February 2019
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ers, reduce anxiety, require no additional measures or training and work seamlessly in its environment.
The term secured entry is usually held for high security buildings associated with the government or corporate entities protecting secrets. It brings to mind visions of guards, multiple gates, card key swipes and retinal scans. While this can be practical for Top Secret cleared areas, it does not apply to school of 3,000 teenagers, a college campus with 10,000 college students and the average American workplace. The critical control measure needed at the time of an active shooter is at the point where the shooter and the victim meet, and it must be controlled by the intended victim. This point occurs at the classroom, emergency room, office, break- room or common meeting place within the building. It is crucial to control the entry to these spaces and make them safe, by placing a ballistic barrier at the point where a shoot- er can inflict their rage on the victim.
In honest attempts to stop an active shoot- er from taking lives, many precautions have been emplaced or are actively being dis- cussed by security experts around the nation. Most set their goals at early detection in some form or with alert procedures once an incident has occurred. While all these attempts can help deter, they will not save the life of a person who is in the immediate pres- ence of an active shooter resolute to kill.
Those who do not post their intentions on social media, will not be stopped before they arrive and pull the trigger. Metal detectors do not stop a determined attacker willing to walk through and inflict carnage. Alarms, phone apps and cameras will only work after the shots are fired and then only serve for locational and forensic evidence in the after- math. The only lifesaving device that can alter the fate of a victim in the presence of an attacker is a bullet resistant barrier that can withstand the weapon chosen by the shooter.
Ballistic Resistant Barrier
I have personally benefitted from this protec- tion while serving overseas in the military. My tactical vest stopped an enemy AK-47 round from entering my body and causing potentially fatal damage. This incident has given me a unique understanding of the direct benefits of ballistic barriers between myself and those who would do me harm. In that moment, exactly like coming face to face with a school or workplace shooter, the only safety measure that counted was the ballistic plate able to stop that rifle round. Over a decade of special operations training at the highest levels, vast experience in previous combat missions and all other cutting-edge gear I was issued were not a deciding factor
in my survival that day. It all came down to a barrier between me and the shooter that stopped the bullet.
If the armor plate had been unable to stop the round, the result would be catastrophi- cally different. This is crucial when deter- mining the secured entry point level of bal- listic protection. It does no good to place barriers for a small pistol if the shooter chooses to bring an assault rifle to carry out their evil plans.
As we have seen from multiple incidents, if we are to provide protection we must pro- tect to the level necessary to overcome the threat. Sadly, as the armament of potential shooters has grown to include assault rifles and their lethal rounds, proper ballistic pro- tection must be emplaced to counter these weapons. Not only will this ensure surviv- ability in the occasion of a shooting incident,
"When spree shooters set out to commit their atrocities,
they are looking for maximum damage in minimal time.
The goal is violence for violence's sake."
but it will build confidence in students and employees when they are trained on using these ballistic doors and taking refuge from a shooter. Doors equipped to the proper level that can stop bullets from entering the room will provide a sense of safety and create a better work and school environment with reduced fear and anxiety.
A True Sense of Security
By upgrading the existing door and turning it to a ballistic barrier, it will make training and actions natural for all concerned. In lockdown drills, people are taught to lock the doors and move away from them as standard active shooter protocol; this will work perfectly for a ballistic door with no change to procedures. Simply shut and lock it to create a life-saving space. The correct door will protect and boost the confidence by providing a true sense of security for everyone involved. In turn, this will ease the burden on leaders and teachers who must maintain control of groups in these extremely trying situations. All of this can be
accomplished without requiring any special training sessions or adding new or additional steps to this most stressful situation.
When spree shooters set out to commit their atrocities they are looking for maxi- mum damage in minimal time. The goal is violence for violence’s sake at the expense of any who cross their path. If a ballistic barrier can be emplaced between them and their desired victims, they are completely sepa- rated from their intention. In a properly equipped school or workplace, they will not be able to inflict the damage they intended. Their gun becomes a sledgehammer in a house of rubber walls, serving only to frus- trate the user and cause no injury to his intended victims. The delays caused by hav- ing the protective door between the shooter and their victims allow the authorities to close with the shooter without loss of life during critical response transit time.
Those looking for dispersions will lament the ability to shoot through walls if they are not ballistic as well. It is unreasonable to stop all avenues of destruction available to a shooter. We cannot turn our schools, hospi- tals and workplaces into impenetrable for- tresses. Blind shots through the walls are far less effective than those aimed with accuracy through unprotected doorways. Human nature will move a shooter to the openings to visualize his targets. It is here that a ballistic barrier will provide the protection from the well-aimed shots, cause a delay while the shooter attempts to attack and reduce the treacherous round count as the shooter wastes their ineffective bullets.
Many times, we have heard the call for a return to simpler times. While this is not possible in our acknowledgement of a mod- ern threat, it can be possible in the best defense for that threat. We would not think of sending out those that face danger from a bullet every day without proper ballistic pro- tection. Police and military members in harm’s way naturally put on ballistic vests every day, and these devices have saved many, many lives.
The final answer for our schools and plac- es of work is permanent, ballistic protection from an armed assailant with an assault rifle. This type of door placed between a shooter and his intended victim will negate his attack and save lives. It is a permanent, one-time solution that will require no electrical power, no program updates, no software patches, no internet, Wi-Fi or phone connectivity and no change to current policy and training. It will simply save lives and create a better environ- ment for all.
Kirk Ferguson is the Director of Special Projects at R2P Innovations.
secured entry
16 campuslifesecurity.com | JANUARY/FEBRUARY 2019