

“Training will be repeated to specific groups of employees to reinforce certain aspects of the system,” Ragsdale said.Ĭhannel 2 Action News asked the district how one employee was able to trigger a code red alert at 11 other different schools. Now I haven’t gotten a status - we have a debrief meeting later today to hear about all of the things that are going well some of the things that we need to take care of,” Ragsdale said back in August.įast forward to October and the district is now making changes to the system to prevent accidental lockdowns. “That system is to be up and running by today. The district’s security system is new, and Channel 2 Action News asked Ragsdale about it back in August, on the first day of the school year. Teachers were grabbing students from the hall,” Laura Judge, a parent, told Channel 2 Action News. “Some of the input that we got from the community included finding out that kids were scared.
Red alarm no background driver#
U-Haul driver crashes into Gwinnett house after leading officers on chase, police say.Police: Citizen shoots man running through neighborhood, threatening people with knives.“We don’t know why:” Family of Navy veteran, father shot and killed on I-285 wants answers.“He said to me ‘oh we have a code red today’ and I said, ‘What? You had one too?’,” the parent said. We spoke with a parent whose son attends Teasley elementary school. “Code red alerts were issued at 11 Cobb schools,” Superintendent Chris Ragsdale said during a school board meeting last week. That’s what happened last week and it was an accident that Cobb County school leaders say an employee is responsible for. It wasn’t a scheduled school drill in fact it wasn’t supposed to happen at all. “It’s very concerning - it’s just not good,” Germide Nord said.
