Bomb threat at LaFayette High
Monday August 25, 2008 4:49:09pm
Someone made a bomb threat at LaFayette High School Monday afternoon.
The following message regarding the bomb threat is posted on the LaFayette High Web site:
“There was a written bomb threat found in a hallway at 1:45. Students were immediately evacuated and 911 was notified as well as the superintendent. The building was declared clear by the LaFayette Chief of Police.
“In the event of a future evacuation, car riders will be picked up in the rear of the school at the football stadium ticket booth.
“Thanks to the LaFayette Police Department, the LaFayette Fire Department, and Super-intendent Melissa Mathis for their assistance in this matter. Also thanks to our parents and community for their cooperation in removing students from campus.”
Last week the Walker County school system ran its first test on an emergency notification system.
The notification system, called SchoolCast, can send a message in a short amount of time to thousands of cell phones, mobile devices, landlines and computers in the event of an emergency.
On Monday messages were sent out to thousands of parents regarding the bomb threat and early dismissals.
The Walker school board decided to purchase SchoolCast after several emergency inci-dents last year.
At Ridgeland High in early March, rumors rapidly spread among students that a violent racial disturbance would occur. In the end, the disturbance didn’t happen, but the threat spawned deep concerns among parents, students and staff.
At LaFayette High School in early May, there was a rash of bomb threats. The threats, and the manner in which school officials notified the public, raised concerns.
According to Superintendent of Schools Melissa Mathis, on Monday she arrived at the school within four minutes of being told about the bomb threat, and lightening was begin-ning to become an issue in the south end of the county.
“Emergency services were telling us that the students needed to be moved as quickly as possible. Emergency teams were sweeping the building, because the school was no longer in charge. When we called 911, the operations go over to the emergency response and that comes through 911,” Mathis said.
“They were absolutely outstanding,” she said. “They were on the scene immediately. They followed all the previously discussed protocols we met this summer to preview….. Both school officials and emergency services were aware of how we would each follow our proto-cols when situations like this came about and it went extraordinarily well on site.”
Mathis said that when they began to know that they had to move the children quickly, she contacted Kevin Richardson, who oversees transportation for the school system, and he was on the scene within minutes and he contacted the bus drivers.
The bus route had to be flipped in order to have the high school students picked up first, then the middle school and then the elementary students.
“The bomb threat came when the impending weather threat was also there. It was a dou-ble incident,” she said.
According to Mathis, all the children had left the school prior to the rain starting.
According to Mathis, the notification system is what helped the school system get through the incident.
The parents and others who are listed on the emergency card are the ones who are called.
“I mean these calls went widespread. The system worked,” she said.
According to Mathis, the bomb threat call came in at 1:45 p.m., by 1:56 p.m. the notifica-tion system message was released.
Mathis said that it called 4,095 contacts on the first attempt.
“What we are prepared to do know is scale back to a first contact number only, then it will become that individual’s responsibility to notify others on their call list,” she said.
Mathis said that the initial call was followed by other calls to other factions on the list to alert those people on the list of the changing situation.
“First thing they knew there was an incident, next they notified of the dismissal and how that would precede, then elementary students were notified that their routes had been re-versed, and finally the fourth call was that all was clear,” she said Monday. “That will be followed by a message this evening on LaFayette High’s Web site.”
Mathis said that the person(s) responsible for the bomb threat would be prosecuted to the full extent of the law and other procedural policies will be reviewed and enacted as needed to quickly stymie this situation.
The following message regarding the bomb threat is posted on the LaFayette High Web site:
“There was a written bomb threat found in a hallway at 1:45. Students were immediately evacuated and 911 was notified as well as the superintendent. The building was declared clear by the LaFayette Chief of Police.
“In the event of a future evacuation, car riders will be picked up in the rear of the school at the football stadium ticket booth.
“Thanks to the LaFayette Police Department, the LaFayette Fire Department, and Super-intendent Melissa Mathis for their assistance in this matter. Also thanks to our parents and community for their cooperation in removing students from campus.”
Last week the Walker County school system ran its first test on an emergency notification system.
The notification system, called SchoolCast, can send a message in a short amount of time to thousands of cell phones, mobile devices, landlines and computers in the event of an emergency.
On Monday messages were sent out to thousands of parents regarding the bomb threat and early dismissals.
The Walker school board decided to purchase SchoolCast after several emergency inci-dents last year.
At Ridgeland High in early March, rumors rapidly spread among students that a violent racial disturbance would occur. In the end, the disturbance didn’t happen, but the threat spawned deep concerns among parents, students and staff.
At LaFayette High School in early May, there was a rash of bomb threats. The threats, and the manner in which school officials notified the public, raised concerns.
According to Superintendent of Schools Melissa Mathis, on Monday she arrived at the school within four minutes of being told about the bomb threat, and lightening was begin-ning to become an issue in the south end of the county.
“Emergency services were telling us that the students needed to be moved as quickly as possible. Emergency teams were sweeping the building, because the school was no longer in charge. When we called 911, the operations go over to the emergency response and that comes through 911,” Mathis said.
“They were absolutely outstanding,” she said. “They were on the scene immediately. They followed all the previously discussed protocols we met this summer to preview….. Both school officials and emergency services were aware of how we would each follow our proto-cols when situations like this came about and it went extraordinarily well on site.”
Mathis said that when they began to know that they had to move the children quickly, she contacted Kevin Richardson, who oversees transportation for the school system, and he was on the scene within minutes and he contacted the bus drivers.
The bus route had to be flipped in order to have the high school students picked up first, then the middle school and then the elementary students.
“The bomb threat came when the impending weather threat was also there. It was a dou-ble incident,” she said.
According to Mathis, all the children had left the school prior to the rain starting.
According to Mathis, the notification system is what helped the school system get through the incident.
The parents and others who are listed on the emergency card are the ones who are called.
“I mean these calls went widespread. The system worked,” she said.
According to Mathis, the bomb threat call came in at 1:45 p.m., by 1:56 p.m. the notifica-tion system message was released.
Mathis said that it called 4,095 contacts on the first attempt.
“What we are prepared to do know is scale back to a first contact number only, then it will become that individual’s responsibility to notify others on their call list,” she said.
Mathis said that the initial call was followed by other calls to other factions on the list to alert those people on the list of the changing situation.
“First thing they knew there was an incident, next they notified of the dismissal and how that would precede, then elementary students were notified that their routes had been re-versed, and finally the fourth call was that all was clear,” she said Monday. “That will be followed by a message this evening on LaFayette High’s Web site.”
Mathis said that the person(s) responsible for the bomb threat would be prosecuted to the full extent of the law and other procedural policies will be reviewed and enacted as needed to quickly stymie this situation.
Post a comment: You must be logged in order to comment.
Comments: 15 Joined: 01/18/2007 |
08/25/2008 05:00:43 PM
I recieved a few emails from schoolcast, and one did tell me about the bomb threat, but it makes no sense that the kids were let out early and then the elementary students held over if they were released because of the weather, considering that some of the buses were already at the elementary schools collecting the students and told to put the kids back off the buses and report to the high school first. I mean come on just tell the truth, we already knew there was a bomb threat because of the calls and emails from school cast and this only took place in lafayette, the schools in rossville were not affected, they went on the regular schedules. |
<< < Prev - Next > >>
Login
| Password: |
Newest Users
Popular Blogs
What makes me mad in Walker County is...
The Watercooler
Matters of Faith
Disappearance of Theresa Parker, 911 dispatcher in Walker County
LaFayette man arrested on federal pornography charges
What makes me mad in Catoosa County is...
What makes me mad in Floyd County is...
Catoosa fire meeting heats up
Most students promoted despite CRCT failure
Candidates for Walker County clerk of Superior Court
Recent Blogs
And the winner is; Lakeview Fort Oglethorpe High School, Governor’s Cup No. 2
Jeff O’Bryant: Bush bailed, people nailed
LaFayette Rotary holds mock election
Democrats charge Catoosa Chamber debate was partisan
Handgun found in restroom at Ridgeland High
Jeannie Babb Taylor: Got melamine? Formula-fed infants are at risk both at home and abroad
New policy requires Walker County students to make up time for bomb threats
Naman Crowe: The Russia/Georgia Conflict and America
Jeannie Babb Taylor: Palin pros and cons
Northwestern, Coosa Valley tech colleges will merge services
Comments: 304
Joined: 02/05/2007