EBR school board member claims 11 guns found on campuses this school year
BATON ROUGE - The 40 caliber handgun with a switch that was discovered in a student's back pack at McKinley High School, and an unloaded .45 pistol found in a Belaire High School student's locker last month were just the tip of the iceberg according to an East Baton Rouge School Board member.
District 2 member Dadrius Lanus says during a "School Safety Panel" on Aug. 20, the Sheriff's Office said nine guns were confiscated from students across all EBR schools at the beginning of the school year.
"To hear the sheriff's department say they confiscated nine guns and then we're having the conversation again about two more guns being brought on campus, that's an issue," he said.
That number of guns reportedly includes those found at charter and private schools. Six were at public schools, according to school and law enforcement officials.
The potential revelation raises transparency concerns surrounding EBR schools.
"Obviously what we're doing right now isn't working. We need to go back to the drawing board. We need to have discussions that have sense. We need to also talk to our students to understand why guns are being brought on campus," Lanus said.
After the guns were discovered at McKinley and Belaire, WBRZ asked school system officials on how the guns got into the schools and did not receive a substantive answer.
Trending News
"There are ongoing investigations right now and a lot of those things are going to come out whenever they give the data assessment about how those things are even plausible on school campuses," Lanus said.
Two days before, Superintendent Lamont Cole discussed school safety at that same panel. Right now, Lanus says Cole is doing everything he can behind the scenes.
"I think they will hear from him, and I think those concerns are honest I think those concerns are true. I think the people need to continue to let that be known. If you want to hear from the superintendent, make sure you get on his schedule. If you want to talk to the superintendent, let's schedule some workshops," Lanus said.
He says currently the entire school district is working on a new comprehensive security plan but will need community input.
"A lot of what you see happening inside our schools is a direct correlation to what's happening inside our community. A lot of the problems, issues, situations, those things are boiling over inside of the communities where these students live, so by the time they get to school, it's a continuation of what we see happening there. We have to involve those communities. We have to involve those residents. We have to involve those parents," Lanus said.
Lanus said he plans to hold a series of town hall-style meetings to address school safety concerns soon.