Santa Fe HS survivor Flo Rice a key member in granting school shooting prevention tech

Thursday, July 30, 2020
More than two years after the shooting at Santa Fe High School, survivor Flo Rice is still fighting to make schools and surrounding communities safer.

Rice is one of 11 members of a selection committee for the nonprofit School Safety Grant committee, which offers technology to schools, police departments and places of large gatherings, such as churches.
[Ads /]
The committee helps hand out $20 million worth of grants for technology called A.L.E.R.T. software, which gives those with the system to ability to detect firearms in schools, resulting in shaving precious, life-saving time off the normal police response to an active shooter.

"When law enforcement receives an active shooter notification, they may not have ever been in this building, so you tell them it's on the third floor or by the art lab. They have no idea what that means," said Rice.

SEE ALSO: Santa Fe High School shooting survivor wants training for substitute teachers
Santa Fe HS survivor fighting for more substitute teacher training


The software gives dispatchers and police interactive floorplans with remote access to campus cameras.



While the possibility of saving lives should be celebrated, School Safety Grant was created from tragedy. The chair of the committee, Andrew Pollack, lost his daughter in the Stoneman Douglas High School shooting that took place a couple of months before Santa Fe.

"It's a godsend what he's come up with to allow the police to immediately have their sights on what's going on in the school," Rice said of Pollack.
[Ads /]
One critical element that's part of the A.L.E.R.T. software is remote access to lock and unlock doors.

Rice said many victims in the Santa Fe shooting were in an art lab with a secondary exit, but it was locked and the substitute teacher in the class that day did not have keys.

"We had students in the art room that couldn't get out. The doors were locked and they were trapped with the shooter in this room," Rice recalled.

The grants range from about $20,000 for schools, to $40,000 for police departments. Applications are being accepted online at the School Safety Grant website.



"People need to be aware that this can happen and these are things you don't think about unless you've survived it," Rice said.

SEE MORE:
'CONSTANT MEMORY': Santa Fe survivor writes emotional letter after learning bullet-shattered window still has not been replaced
[Ads /]
Santa Fe survivor writes emotional letter after learning bullet-shattered window still has not been replaced


Santa Fe officer now 'lifelong friends' with husband of teacher he saved
Santa Fe officer now 'lifelong friends' with husband of teacher he saved


Santa Fe HS substitute teacher injured in shooting gets to see daughter's graduation
Injured Santa Fe substitute teacher among Trump meeting attendees


Follow Shelley Childers on Facebook, Twitter and Instagram.
Copyright © 2024 KTRK-TV. All Rights Reserved.