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NEW YORK PARENTS PUSH FOR REFORM OF SCHOOL LOCKDOWN DRILLS



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By
Jessica Gould

Published Jan 4, 2024 at 8:54 a.m. ET

7 comments

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By
Jessica Gould

Published Jan 4, 2024 at 8:54 a.m. ET

7 comments

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As a new legislative session kicks off in Albany, some New York City parents are
pressing lawmakers to reform the mandatory school lockdown drills they worry are
traumatizing children.

Since 2016, the state has required all schools – both public and private -- to
hold four lockdown drills each academic year.

The reform bills, introduced by state Senator Andrew Gounardes and
Assemblymember Jo Anne Simon, would reduce the required number of lockdown
drills from four to one per year. They would also mandate advance notice to
parents about when a lockdown drill will be held, allow parents to opt out, and
require more training for educators. Schools would be allowed to do more than
one drill per year if they wish.

Parent Marco Pupo said he first became concerned about the drills after picking
his son up from kindergarten at his public school on the Lower East Side.

“The first thing he said when I picked him up was, ‘Daddy, there was danger in
school today. There was someone trying to get inside of the school to get us,’”
said Pupo, who is among the parents advocating for the legislation.

His son didn’t understand that they were only practicing for a threat. “He
continued to insist that it was the real thing,” Pupo said.



“I don't judge or blame anyone who created this, but at the same time, I think
there's way better ways of managing this situation,” he said.

The drills are prevalent nationwide as schools try to protect children from gun
violence and mass shootings. There were 37 school shootings around the country
last year, according to a tally by Education Week.

Brooklyn Tech senior Sonja Aibel said she’s been doing lockdown drills for as
long as she can remember, but that hasn’t made her feel safer. “I don't feel
confident that this is going to help us in the case of a threat,” she said.
Instead, the drills make her feel more anxious. Crouched in a corner during the
drills, her mind calls up disturbing images from the news. “I typically find
myself reflecting on recent articles about school shootings at colleges and
universities and other schools across America,” she said. “It can be a really
scary thing.”

She said it would be helpful if teachers offered students a space to process
their fears before or after the drills.

Some research has shown the drills increase anxiety among children.

In a statement to Gothamist, Assemblymember Simon said she was optimistic about
the bill’s passage this year. “Parents concerned about the fear and anxiety
caused to their children by excessive (four mandated) lockdown drills brought
this issue to our attention,” she said. She added that the nature of the drills
varies “dramatically” by school district across the state.



The legislation is in committee. Albany legislators kicked off a six-month
session Wednesday.

In New York City, education department officials said teachers are coached in
age-appropriate language to explain the drills to students. Typically an
announcement goes out that there is a lockdown and students move out of sight
and keep silent. Teachers then check the hallways for any students outside their
classrooms, lock their doors, turn off the lights, and wait for first responders
or an alert that the lockdown has been lifted.

“New York City public schools work tightly with the NYPD to plan, prepare, and
respond to all emergency situations,” said department spokesperson Jenna Lyle.
”As part of that essential work, every building maintains robust emergency
readiness protocols, including a designated building response team and regular
emergency readiness drills.”

The department declined to comment on the reforms proposed in Albany.

Parent Holly Spiegel said she worries the drills might be counterproductive,
noting that while school shootings are statistically rare, the gunmen usually
come from within school communities. She’s also advocating for the reform.

“We’re actually actually teaching our safety procedures to the people most
likely to take advantage of them,” she said.



Meanwhile, she said, students come to feel less safe when their schools should
be a haven from violence.

Greg Floyd, president of Teamsters Local 237, the union that represents school
safety agents, said that it’s the gun laws that are most in need of reforms. “I
would like to see them make more stringent gun laws so that the need to have
drills is lessened,” he said.




Tagged

new york
education

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Jessica Gould
Twitter

Jessica is the education reporter for WNYC and Gothamist. During the Covid-19
pandemic, Jessica reported on the shutdown and reopening of the nation’s largest
school system, highlighting the unprecedented impacts on learning, health and
mental health for students, staff and families. Got a tip? Email
jgould@nypublicradio.org

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Gothamist is funded by sponsors and member donations

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Gothamist is funded by sponsors and member donations

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