Pubdate: Sun, 22 Oct 2006
Source: Ledger, The (FL)
Copyright: 2006 The Ledger
Contact:  http://www.theledger.com/
Details: http://www.mapinc.org/media/795
Author: Tiffany Lankes, NYT Regional Newspapers

SCHOOL'S PRACTICE 'EMERGENCY' TURNS UP REAL WEAPONRY, DRUGS

BRADENTON -- With the recent rash of school shootings fresh on his 
mind, Manatee High School Principal Jeff Asher wanted to see how well 
his staff would respond if there was a weapon on campus.

So he came up with a mock scenario -- aided by about two dozen 
uniformed officers -- about a student bringing a gun onto campus, and 
decided to find out. But Thursday morning's drill quickly turned 
real, with police arresting four students for drug and weapons possession.

"I knew right away something was going on," said sophomore Destiny 
Dawson. Other students said wild rumors -- including that someone had 
been abducted or killed -- spread throughout the school.

In all, police searched about 200 students and 300 cars in the hourlong drill.

School and police officials would not release the details of the 
students' arrests, except to say they had marijuana and knives. The 
students were taken to the juvenile assessment center and will face 
the appropriate consequences, Asher said.

Drug sweeps and security drills have become common on high school 
campuses. In the wake of the recent school shootings, some other 
schools in the region offered campus security officers additional 
training or locked their classrooms.

But the response at Manatee was more extreme.

Shortly after school started in the morning, at least two dozen 
police cars surrounded the campus. Police randomly evacuated 10 
classrooms, and officers escorted students away to search them. 
Drug-sniffing dogs checked cars and classrooms.

Throughout the drill, teachers and students had no idea what was going on.

"We made it very realistic to see how we might handle a critical 
situation," Asher said. "This showed us what we do well and what we 
need to improve."

Asher said all of the students not involved in the drill continued 
their class work as normal.

But his students tell a different story. As they heard the chaos of 
the drill outside their classrooms, students grilled their teachers 
for information and spread wild rumors to their friends in other 
classes via cell phone text messages.

"One girl told me 'code yellow' meant either someone killed 
themselves or someone was abducted," said Priscilla Balboa, 15. "At 
first I thought it was true."

Despite the confusion, Asher said the drill was an important 
indicator of how well his school would respond in an emergency -- 
even if it was a little extreme.

Tiffany Lankes writes for the Herald-Tribune in Sarasota.
- ---
MAP posted-by: Elaine