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Another Reminder About Emergency Planning for an Active Shooter

Washington Post shooting calendarYesterday, Dec. 2, 2015, marked the 336th day of the year and 355th mass shooting, according to the Mass Shooting Tracker, which logs incidents in which four or more people are shot. Indeed, there were two mass shootings yesterday: a smaller incident in Georgia in which a woman was killed and three men injured, and the slaughter of at least 14 people and injury of 17 at an office holiday party at San Bernadino’s Inland Regional Center, which provides social services to residents with developmental disabilities. No motive has been found thus far, but two shooters have been identified as a county employee who had attended the party and his wife.

As I wrote in the November issue of Risk Management magazine, researchers from the Harvard School of Public Health and Northeastern University found that the rate of mass shootings has tripled since 2011. According to a study released last year by the Federal Bureau of Investigation, active shooter incidents, where police arrive to a shooting in progress, are also on the rise. The FBI found that 160 of these incidents had taken place in the United States between 2000 and 2013, 70% of which occurred in either a business or educational environment. An average of 11.4 incidents occurred annually, averaging 6.4 in the first seven years studied, and 16.4 in the last seven years.

With the growing frequency and ever-increasing fatalities, risk managers clearly cannot afford to become so inured to these incidents. Rather, much like they do for other forms of crisis, from fires to tornadoes, they need to be acting now to train employees, develop emergency plans, and ensure business continuity provisions are in place.

“You have smart people leading organizations who know they need to do something, but you see them fall into a pattern of planning to have a plan, and they confuse that with taking action on the issue,” said Jay Hart, director of the Force Training Institute. “Planning to have a plan is not a plan. They need to understand that this is a leadership issue, because it is about protecting the people in the company.”

For tips on preparing for an active shooter incident, check out the Q&A with Hart from the December issue of Risk Management, and “Preparing for an Active Shooter Incident,” from the November issue. When developing a plan to respond to an active shooter crisis, make sure to:RM11.15_ff_shoot_side.630

Tighter Gun Laws?

After 15 people were shot dead in and around a German school campus by a former student, it seems Germany feels no need for stricter gun laws. The country’s Interior Minister, Wolfgang Schaeuble, stated “I can’t see how a change in weapons rules would contribute anything to solving the problem.”

Mr. Schaeuble, are you serious?

True, a combination of mental health problems and societal influences, among others, play a part in reasons behind most school shootings, and all factors should be addressed. However, it is hard to control mental health and society at large. Tim Kretschmer, the 17 year-old shooter who killed 15 before taking his own life, had a history of depression and failed to continuously attend his outpatient therapy sessions. No one had control over helping him, just as no one has control over forcing an individual to continuously take medication for their mental illness. There is no total control over mental health.

Additionally, though attempts have been made, and some ground gained, in protecting influential children against violence and sex in television, films and video games, there will never be strong enough protection. If a 13 year-old wants to play Resident Evil 4 (ranked the #1 most violent video game), the age restriction on its purchase will not stop him. A friend, older brother or even his parents will purchase it for him and within the first minutes of play, that impressionable mind will see the corpse of a woman pinned up on a wall by a pitchfork through her face. There is no total control over societal influences.

There is control over guns. With tighter gun CONTROL laws, access to these killing machines can be greatly restricted. It is naïve to think that stricter gun control laws will put an end to school shootings, but with nothing else to control, we must turn to legislation in hopes of one day getting through a school year shooting-free.

Tighter gun control laws –- it’s a no-brainer, people.

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