White River Valley High School hosts intruder training drill

Monday, July 22, 2019
At the request of law enforcement, trainees exit the building with hands in the air.
By Patti Danner

Each year, school officials from all Greene County schools, law enforcement, fire, EMS, officials from the Greene County Prosecutor’s Office, ISP officers and first responders gather for specialized training in the event there should ever be an active intruder scenario at one of the five schools.

Vehicles, including police cars and SUVs, bright red fire trucks, DNR pickups and ambulances filled the parking lot at the entrance to WRV High School, their drivers gathered inside, receiving up-to-date focused training from specialists including Linton-Stockton School Resource Officer Josh Goodman.

Training drills such as the one conducted at WRV HS on July 17 serve to keep all agencies apprised of current protocols and procedures and provide a simulated situation which offers all of those in attendance practice and experience in case such an event should ever transpire in Greene County.

Police officers and others present practiced responses, communication and cooperation between agencies and effective techniques to deal with an intruder or other disaster scenarios.

Participating agencies included, among others, all county schools, the Linton Fire Department, Worthington Fire Department, Jasonville Fire Department, Bloomfield Fire Department, Fairplay and Grant Township Fire Departments, Lyons Fire Department, Switz City Fire Department, the police departments of Linton, Bloomfield, Jasonville and Worthington, Greene County Prosecutor’s Office, the Department of Natural Resources, Greene County Sheriff’s Department, Indiana State Police, Greene County Rescue, Greene County Emergency Medical Service, Greene County Ambulance and Linton Police Department Dispatch.

Following the “classroom” training, officers and others gathered outside the school to await the “hands-on” portion of the day-long training.

In response to a simulated emergency call of “shots fired at WRV High School,” they sprang into action, with law enforcement working in coordination with one another to locate and safely subdue the intruder and school officials acting in unison with law enforcement and first responders to tend to victims.

EMT’s were ready, quickly setting up a staging area and triage system to identify victims with tags denoting their vital signs and a color-coded system of triage tags.

These tags enable first responders to determine at a glance how best to treat a particular victim. The color system uses four colored tags which the first person to get to a victim would use to alert the next wave of medical professionals.

One tag is green, indicating the victim is “the walking wounded,” a person who needs medical attention but is ambulatory and can walk to a waiting ambulance unassisted. A yellow tag would indicate the victim needs medical attention and cannot get to an ambulance or other medical transport on their own.

A red tag indicates the victim is immobile and in immediate need of medical attention with life-threatening injuries.

A black tag means the victim is a fatality and nothing can be done medically for that person.

At the WRV training exercise, 14 “patients” were tagged in the triage area, with differing levels of need. The triage area had been prepared with cots and medical supplies. Of the EMTs present two were singled out as triage officers, making them the ones to make triage decisions.

About 30 to 40 volunteers were on hand, playing the roles of teachers and other staff, some identified as victims and some not.

With area schools nearing the start of the 2019-20 school year, knowing our area agencies stay in practice with our schools and one another, Greene County parents can take some comfort in knowing our schools are prepared.

With all of the planning and the list of duties he must accomplish before the start of the school year, Superintendent Hacker said this type of training has a place at the top of the list.

“This is the best thing we do all year,” he commented at the day’s end.

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