School Safety Focus Of W.Va. House Of Delegates General Session

Department of Homeland Security Deputy Secretary Rob Cunningham was one of three state school leaders invited to speak to delegates. He is tasked with developing a new best-practice school safety plan for the state.

School safety was the topic of a West Virginia House of Delegates General Session on Tuesday.

Department of Homeland Security Deputy Secretary Rob Cunningham was one of three state school leaders invited to speak to delegates. He is tasked with developing a new best-practice school safety plan for the state.

He said he’s already beginning the process for his number one idea which is developing a universal app that would allow students or anyone else to report potentially dangerous talk or activity.

“It would automatically go to our local law enforcement,” Cunningham said. “It would automatically go to the fusion (central command) center so we can immediately act. The systems we have now are good but I think they’re mostly antiquated.”

He said the app would not be limited to school systems.

“I want everyone to be able to have it,” Cunningham said. “So if you drive past the school, when you see the back gate open, you can get on your app and say the back gate’s open. That will hold the administrators responsible for making sure that their school was locked down when it needs to be locked down.”

One delegate asked if an app like that could be abused, and what would be the consequences of false reports. Cunningham said it would be along the same lines as people calling in a false police call.

Cunningham also said, due to limited funding, only a quarter of West Virginia’s 674 schools have designated school resource officers.

School Building Authority Executive Director David Roach told delegates only about half of the state’s schools have a main door mechanism to prevent an intruder from entering the building. He said it would take $164 million to outfit all schools with the trapping device.

Roach said outside school doors and windows are labeled and numbered to let first responders know where everything is and where to go in.

Jonah Adkins, the accountability officer with the Department of Education told delegates each school district has a crisis response team and access to an online tool kit on how to address concerns, for example, with a student’s tendency toward violence.

Adkins also said West Virginia schools are involved in the “one caring adult initiative,” pairing one caring adult in the school with one student.

Schools Request Nearly $130 Million for Building and Upgrades

Over the past two days, 18 counties presented their facility needs to the state School Building Authority in Charleston. The requests totaled more than $100 million, but the agency only has about $45 million to give. That means some tough choices between deserving projects across the state.

Here is a list of those projects and their estimated costs.

Doddridge County:

  • $898,128 for two new classrooms at Doddridge County Elementary School
  • $398,128 in SBA funds

Gilmer County:

  •    $15,496,818 to construct a consolidated Gilmer Elementary School
  •    $13,618, 671 in SBA funds

Greenbrier County:

  •    $6,671,958 for an addition to Frankford Elementary School
  •    $6,327,898 in SBA funds

Jackson County:

  •    $17,816,041 to construct a new Ravenswood Middle School
  •    $17,066,041 in SBA funds

Kanawha County:

  • $2,791,352 to add on to and renovate Andrew Heights Elementary School
  • $2,091,352 in SBA funds

Mercer County:

  • $11,136,000 to construct a new Green Valley Elementary School, consolidating a portion of students from three schools
  • $8,908,800 in SBA funds

Mineral County:

  • $4,000,000 in renovations for Keyser Elementary/Middle School
  • $3,500,000 in SBA funds

Mingo County:

  • $10,108,879 for additions and renovations at Burch Middle School in order to consolidate and close Burch Elementary School
  • $9,108.879 in SBA funds

Monongalia County:

  • $15,952,803 to consolidate students from two schools and build a new Suncrest Elementary School
  • $10,952,803 in SBA funds

Ohio County:

  • $6,772,932 for renovations at Ritchie Elementary School
  • $5,892,451 in SBA funds

Pocahontas County:

  • $8,892,426 for renovations at five schools
  • $8,817,426 in SBA funds

Preston County:

  • $2,169,000 to replace the roofs at six schools
  • $2,060,550 in SBA funds

Randolph County:

  • $3,959, 749 for renovations to Tygart Valley Middle-High School
  • $3,709,749 in SBA funds

Ritchie County:

  • $6,641,016 in renovations and an addition to Collins Ferry Elementary School
  • $6,391,016 in SBA funds

Wayne County:

  • $42,200,000 to build two new elementary schools and an addition and renovations to Wayne County High School
  • $18,000,000 in SBA funds

Webster County:

  • $2,357,713 for renovations at Webster County High School
  • $2,257,713 in SBA funds

Wirt County:

  • $2,395,038 for renovations at Wirt County High School
  • $2,270,038 in SBA funds

Schools for the Deaf and Blind:

  • $7,800,000 for three new residential facilities and the demolition of a dilapidated cafeteria
  • $7,100,000 in SBA funds

You can read each county’s proposal in detail at the state School Building Authorities website.

The SBA will meet again on April 28, 2014, to determine which schools are awarded aid.

Exit mobile version