School board or governing bodies must apply with the Texas Commission on Law Enforcement to participate. The proposed candidates are required to undergo an 80-hour training course conducted by a law enforcement academy that has been specifically prepared to provide the school marshal curriculum. The course trains candidates in physical security, improving the security of the campus, use of force, active shooter response, and weapon proficiency. No other course can be substituted or exempt an individual from the specific Achool Marshal training course, the commission says.
“It is time to take aggressive and deliberate steps toward the enhancement of our security measures in order to better protect the lives of our students and faculty,” Hendricks said in a letter to school district leaders in his county. “We must insure that our schools and the lives our loved ones are as safe and secure as possible and that none are designated as a ‘soft target.’”
Abbott directed several state agencies to implement safety protocols, including instructing a state university center to provide active shooter training to law enforcement and school administrators in school districts statewide. He’s also directed the Texas Education Agency to create rules mandating enhanced safety standards for public schools, asked the legislature to develop recommendations for school safety, and directed the Texas School Safety Center to review school safety procedures for all public schools and implement inspections and enforcement mechanisms.
In addition to expanding the School Marshal program, in 2015 he signed into law the “campus carry” law. It allows licensed firearm owners to carry concealed handguns on college and university campuses and gave public universities some discretion to regulate campus carry.
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