The school marshal program allows certain school staffers to carry a firearm and neutralize active shooters on campus. Here’s how participants train.

A gaggle of reporters clustered last week near shelves of picture books and signs marked “Love” and “Read” in the Windermere Elementary School library.

Then shots rang. The reporters jolted back, their iPhones shaking in surprise. A gunman ran through the hallway until he was shot down by a masked educator.

The Texas Commission on Law Enforcement was hosting one of its trainings last week for school marshals — designated school teachers, administrators and maintenance staff who are licensed to carry firearms in case of an active shooter on campus. The marshal program, which began in 2014, has grown considerably since the May shooting at Santa Fe High School south of Houston. Before this summer, TCOLE had hosted nine school marshal trainings in four years, said Gretchen Grigsby, the commission’s director of government relations. But by the end of this summer, the commission will have hosted six more.

Lawmakers, including Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, want to boost funding for the program soon so even more school personnel can sign up.

At the Pflugerville elementary school, 20 trainees from around the state wore face masks and neck guards as they got into their roles. When the shots were fired, a cascade of trainees posing as panicked school children screamed and ran down the hall with their hands held up. Two other marshals-in-training ran toward the crowd with their guns drawn, looking to see whom they needed to shoot. Finally, an instructor wielding his own gun emerged behind the screaming students. The marshals shot and took him down. The whole thing took about 20 seconds.

Friday’s demonstration came toward the end of an eight-day training session that educators must undergo to become school marshals. Trainees receive classroom instruction, live firearm training at a shooting range and training in simulated shootings such as the demonstration in Pflugerville. The simulation featured “simunition” — paintball-esque bullets shot from blue Glock 17s.

Marshals range from janitors to school board members, and many of them didn’t have experience in law enforcement, though they all must have a license to carry before they can enroll in the course. Kim Vickers, executive director of TCOLE, said the fast pace and panicked frenzy reflects a real school shooting, where as many as nine people can die every second a shooter is active. One of the hardest decisions in the moment is knowing when to shoot, especially when the mass shooter is a student, he said.

“They’ve got to cross that idea of, ‘Can I pull that trigger if I need to pull that trigger?'” Vickers said “And you really never know that — you really won’t until the situation happens — but you’ll come closer to resolving that in your mind when you’re put in that situation where you’re very keyed up and the adrenaline’s pumping.”

Ever wonder what school marshal training looks like? They're using training glock 17s akin to a paintball gun pic.twitter.com/h6lZEoRN75 — Matthew Choi (@matthewchoi2018) August 10, 2018

And if you’re wondering, yes, the fake bullets hurt.

“If you’re about to be shot with one of these, it really puts some pressure on you because one of these things, it stings pretty well,” Vickers said.

The school marshal program remains controversial. Many educators and activists argue that arming school staff increases access to guns for troubled students. But many Republican lawmakers have rallied around the program since the shooting in Santa Fe. Abbott included it in a series of recommendations to address school violence. In June, a special state Senate committee discussedways to expand its funding. None of the committee’s members spoke against arming teachers at the time. But many of the educators who attended the Senate hearing were fiercely opposed. "My job is to nurture and teach," Mitzi McEwen, a retired principal from Friendswood Independent School District, said at the hearing. "You can't take a teacher that has that love of their students and make them look at their kid and shoot them." Vickers, who also testified at the hearing, said a threat can always fall through the cracks and manifest in school violence. It’s always better to be prepared just in case, he said, and school districts are increasingly requesting marshal training for designated staffers. Trainees must also go through regular psychological screenings and retrain every two years. When marshals are teaching in a classroom, they have to keep their gun in a lockbox. Reporters were invited to Friday’s training under the condition that they not identify any of the trainees. TCOLE says it doesn’t publicize which school districts have marshals because it doesn’t want to advertise the “soft targets” — schools that don’t. One of the trainees, who would not identify himself other than as “an educator from Southeast Texas,” said he had had experience working with firearms as a hunter, but the marshal training took his understanding of active shooter situations to a “new level.” Standing in the hallway with arms crossed over his chest, the trainee said his role is to educate first. Being a marshal is merely one way to protect his students, he said. “Our biggest fear is actually having to use our training,” he said.

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