The frightening truth is that safety never can be guaranteed. Millions of students across the country and about 60,000 across Clark County attend school day after day, buoyed by the finest hopes of their parents and confident in the sense that they will be protected while away from home.
But even with the best-laid plans already in place, school security requires ongoing diligence from school officials and from law enforcement. And, as detailed recently in a two-part series by Columbian reporters Susan Parrish and Paul Suarez, that security has been vastly altered in recent years both in terms of prevention and the level of threats.
It’s not that school violence is a wholly modern invention. The worst school massacre in U.S. history was a bombing that ended in 45 deaths in Bath Township, Mich., in 1927. But the frequency of shootings has increased over the past generation.
Not long ago, school security might have meant concerns over fist fights or an occasional student with a knife, but the scope of school violence has changed. The most prominent events in the minds of the public likely are a 1999 shooting at Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo., and last year’s massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary in Newtown, Conn. Yet the list of school shootings is too long to enumerate, including one that hit relatively close to home in 1998 at Thurston High School in Springfield, Ore.