Thursday, February 14, 2008

Lockdown at School

Yesterday, we had a lockdown at school. Two kids got in a fight and it was broken up. One child came back later and started threatening students and staff. The child tore up the office and attacked the Principal. He wanted to get the child out of the building.

Of course, it escalated. We were told to lock down, no kids in or out. The police were called but all police were at the village 5 miles away. This child has done this multiple times before. I do know the child and the family. This child has some great siblings by the way.

There is a lot of upset with parents and the superintendent has been called a lot. The police came today. Court orders have been in place to keep the child away from the school and staff housing.

We have been working hard to stop the terrible comments and behavior of a few kids. it is an interesting job. I might add that in Alaska, everyone has a gun or two or three. Hunting to live is a way of life. Nobody is really worried but everyone is being cautious.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

no matter where we live there will always be bullies, no matter where we work there will always be bullies, I am so thankful that we don't have that hateful mentality...

Rich said...

We had a big assembly, with the superintendent, board members, lots of community members, etc. The meeting lasted for hours but kids only had to stay for 20 minutes.

I am hoping that community members tell kids to stop saying fuck you to students and staff when they should be doing school work. We shall see.

Rich said...

Parents fret over lockdowns

EMMONAK: Incident is third in Yukon River village since beginning of school year.

By KYLE HOPKINS
khopkins@adn.com | khopkins@adn.com

Published: February 16th, 2008 12:30 AM
Last Modified: February 16th, 2008 04:47 AM

A ninth-grade girl bowled over and slightly injured the school principal while trying to hurt another student in Emmonak on Wednesday -- prompting school officials to lock students in classrooms for their own safety.
Click to enlarge

Click to enlarge

Story tools

Comments

E-mail a friend

Print

Digg this

Seed Newsvine

Send link via AIM

Font size : A | A | A

The next day, many parents kept their kids home and called for a meeting with school district officials in hopes of preventing any future violence. That meeting came Friday, gathering hundreds of people in the Yukon River village of roughly 800.

At the meeting, kids who saw their principal with his arm in a sling were assured that they were safe and everything was OK, said principal Bill Schildbach.

"Part of any sort of healing process -- it's always good to sit down and talk about what's happening, so that's what everybody does."

The school district said no weapons were involved and no students were hurt. But news of the lockdown -- which lasted until the end of the school day Wednesday as parents escorted students home -- put parents on alert.

Members of the local advisory school board said the latest lockdown was the third since the beginning of the school year, an alarming trend.

It didn't help that the news came amid reports of school shootings around the country.

"A lockdown to the parents in our community is what they see on TV, and that's pretty scary," said Dora C. Moore, an advisory school board member and parent who said violence at the local school appeared to be escalating.

Len Hootch is on the advisory board too. She has three kids at the school and said lockdowns are not part of the culture in Emmonak.

"When I first heard that word, I thought of danger, something has happened at the school that is not safe," she said.

Emmonak is one of 11 schools in the Lower Yukon School District, which is headquartered in Mountain Village. Parents said the district superintendent and the chairman of the school board visited the town for Friday's meeting.

Assistant Superintendent Rich Patton said there are maybe four or five lockdowns a year districtwide. "Essentially that keeps the students in the building and locks the outside doors and limits entry," he said.

The latest trouble began Wednesday. Schildbach said a high school student was chasing another student when he stepped in. The pursuing girl ran into Schildbach, knocking him down.

"Just some scratches," he said. "And being an old guy I don't bounce off the floor like I used to."

The girl was angry about being stopped, Schildbach said. He declined to name the student or say exactly what happened next, except that students were locked in and the girl eventually left the school.

As for the student, Patton said, "I think it's fair to say appropriate disciplinary action was taken."

The lockdown was a precaution in a remote village where troopers or village police are not always available to help at the school, Schildbach said. "I have to do something preventative to make sure everybody's safe, because that's all I got."

A spokeswoman for Alaska State Troopers said Friday that troopers are investigating the incident.

Walter Kloepfer is an English teacher at the school and a former city manager for Emmonak. He's also on the city council, and said the issue of local police availability is already an agenda item at the next council meeting.

He said the school had a shorter lockdown about two weeks earlier. "(It) had to do with a student getting rude and losing their temper and pushing their teacher," he said.

Asked if it was the same student as the one who ran into the principal Wednesday, Kloepfer said it was.

He guessed that roughly half the people in town appeared at Friday's meeting. "They discussed different ways that kids can get help or adults, even, can get help," he said.

Anchorage Daily News

Rich said...

There are lots of comments in the Anchorage article: For more information:

google: School Violence, Emmonak, Alaska Click on the anc.com link and read the posts ofter the article - interesting.