School looking into arming its administrators

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CHAMPAIGN (AP) – School officials in a central Illinois town are considering training a handful of administrators as auxiliary police officers and letting them carry concealed handguns at the local high school.

The idea being considered at Washington Community High School is, like many campus-safety plans being discussed nationwide, a response to the December shootings that killed 20 children and six educators at an elementary school in Sandy Hook, Conn.

But it’s illegal in Illinois to carry concealed weapons, so the proposal suggests a way around the law: Making a few administrators part of the police force, Washington police Chief Jim Kuchenbecker said.

“They would not be paid but they would be commissioned as part-time, auxiliary police officers with very restricted responsibilities,” he said. “We’re not talking about going back to the old days of the wild west and giving everybody a gun.”

But those administrators would only be allowed to carry guns on campus – meaning the guns would either be locked in the school or taken home at night. Kuchenbecker said he would prefer the latter.

Kuchenbecker and school Superintendent Jim Dunnan came up with the idea and planned to talk about it with school board members in Washington, a town of about 15,000 just west of Peoria, at a Monday night meeting. Dunnan did not return a call seeking comment Monday.

No action was expected at the meeting, board President Tim Custis said, but he said he wanted to hear more after the idea was presented last week to a parent advisory group. Custis said he expects criticism, and noted that at least one board member has already voiced objections.

“I’m sure the (criticism) is going to be a knee-jerk over-reaction to Sandy Hook,” he said. “I think we’re just trying to set up a last line of defense in the case of an intruder.”

In Illinois, discussions about gun control and arming school staff run into the state’s ban on concealed weapons. A three-judge federal appeals court panel recently struck down the law, but Illinois Attorney General Lisa Madigan has asked that the entire 10-judge court rehear the case.

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