In the midst of a national gun debate led by victims of the Parkland shooting,The Swingin’ Stewardesses one Pennsylvania school district is taking a ... rather questionable approach to protecting students from another in-school tragedy.
The Millcreek School District announced Wednesday that it will be arming its 500 teachers with miniature baseball bats to fend off potential school shooters.
SEE ALSO: Parkland activist has best response to transparent backpack ruleIt didn't take long for Twitter users to criticize the decision.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Superintendent William Hall told Erie News Nowthat the bats, which are only 16 inches long, are supposed to be a "last resort" and that they're an "option and something we want people to be aware of."
The teachers received the bats after a training day about responding to school shootings.
According to Hall, "we're in a day and age where one might need to use them to protect ourselves and our kids." Hall told the New York Timesthat since the bats are mostly "symbolic," they'll only be used during a "hard lockdown situation." The bats will be locked in classrooms for the majority of the school day, to prevent them from getting into the hands of an unruly student.
Right.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Twitter users also criticized the district's decision to arm teachers with mini bats, instead of using the budget for more pressing issues. The bats cost $1,800 in total.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
Others pointed out just how ridiculous the plan sounded.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
This Tweet is currently unavailable. It might be loading or has been removed.
School districts across the United States are looking for ways to prevent another school shooting. A rural Pennsylvania district armed their classrooms with literal buckets of rocks as a "last line of defense." Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, where the fatal shooting happened in Parkland, Florida, now requires its students to carry transparent backpacks.
Hall is wary of falling "back into a false sense of security until it happens again." He told the New York Times that "if you have to take a few bumps and bruises because people think it's silly, I'm OK with that."
Elon Musk sticks to Twitter bet to build world's biggest lithiumRobert Kirkman's superThis is Doomfist, the 25th 'Overwatch' heroThese ad blockers replace digital ads with cats, art, and vintage advertisingEinride selfNobody can get their head around this woman's unusual commuting setupGame of Thrones Season 7 could give us an Arya/Nymeria reunion at lastKevin Durant welcomed Nick Young to the Warriors with a perfect tweetEmma Stone's comments about the Hollywood pay gap give us mixed feelingsKesha says 'hugging is magical' in response to failed Jerry Seinfeld hugWorld's most expensive fidget spinnerResearchers are solving the mysteries of a 65Select McDonalds locations are playing Mozart to chill their drunk customers out'Pokémon Go' celebrates its first birthday by giving Pikachu a hatWatch a bear play in an Alaskan waterfall right from Google EarthThe new 'Friends' fan theory that changes EVERYTHINGMuji is opening its first hotel in Japan, and we can't waitKesha pens emotional Lenny Letter and fights back with an honest new singleAmazon Prime Day: Amazon’s notPitch your startup at this lingerie networking event and oh god tech industry really? Elon Musk just endorsed Trump’s secretary of state pick, and it makes no sense Google Maps will be the built Samsung Galaxy Fold has a European launch date: Sept. 18 Pizza chain offers an 'alternate facts' meaty pizza with no calories Celebrate the end of summer with 'Snowpiercer' 'Joker' wins top Venice Film Festival award given to Oscar winners Apple will livestream Sept. 10 'iPhone 11' event on YouTube 'A Beautiful Day in the Neighborhood' review: Why we need Mr. Rogers Video of former Pakistan president dancing to a Bollywood song sets tongues wagging The Light Phone 2 is here to try to save you from smartphone burnout Trump inspires a new era of music China's latest beauty app takes Snapchat Trump's voter fraud investigation may want to start with his own daughter Lego announces Imperial Star Destroyer from 'Star Wars: A New Hope' Watch hurricane hunters fly through Dorian’s stadium This might be the creepiest cover art of all time Man who lost his testicles while showing off his scuba bong is fake news 13 striking photos that capture India's 68th Republic Day preparations Verizon's 5G service will kick off in 13 NFL stadiums this season Apple Music web player arrives for all web browsers
2.8919s , 8230.5 kb
Copyright © 2025 Powered by 【The Swingin’ Stewardesses】,Exquisite Information Network