Although it was not as they envisioned. The gun was brought inside a backpack of a middle school aged child. Relax, no one died. He was a good kid and never had any intention of using it. Just thought it was super cool and wanted to show it off along with the ammo to his friends… (He didn’t even know it was a real gun.)
The 13 year old as of Friday was being held in the New Castle County Juvenile Detention Center on $39,000 secured bail. And the courts will determine the severity of his penalty.
Of course parents are concerned. In typical parental fashion they said…. “we need metal detectors at every school. .
So, let us work through that premise. Start with how can that be done? Electronic metal detectors are expensive, and we have a lot of schools. Currently the Department of Educations website is listing 213 schools... Now for economic reasons, we would at first need only one security site or pass-through site per building, through which everyone enters, and everyone leaves… Once the initial investment is paid for, then incremental units at other entrances and exits can be later added.
So the number is 213 security machines… Here at Detectronix we have an assortment of walk through metal detectors. Since most of our state’s students are familiar with jails from visiting family members, perhaps the one that is most secure for our schools would the same brand use for jails, sensitive enough to detect a loaded revolve inserted up the anus or vagina. That costs $4199. However, recognizing a future need after the December 14th Newtown shootings, Detectronix has made a commitment to mass produce a cheaper version which will pick up a hand gun and pinpoint it to a general area of the body. That reduced rate is $2499. This cheaper version is more than adequate to isolate incoming weapons, in all but the most sophisticated ploys. Considering the savings, it is the one I would recommend, the Detectronix 6-Zone Walk Through Metal Detector …
Total state cost for walk-through metal detectors? Pretty cheap, just a half a million or exactly $532,500… ($894387 would be the more expensive choice) This does not include the fee charged for the entity that places the phone call, at 10% that would be another $53,250 dollars….
A electroinic security system needs to be manned to be effective. Otherwise it could beep on every student passing through with no accountability. One must assume the station should be manned all day. Even though nothing much happens at any schools entrance after the opening bell, still, if one were intent on bringing a gun to school for say, the purpose of revenge. he would obviously time his arrival at some point after he knew the metal detector was shut down. So personnel must be stationed until close.
The average school day is 7 hours… Multiplied by 5 days per week and it is a thirty five hour job, add half an hour every day to set up and tear down, and it becomes a full time position. At salary it averages $39,000 per year. Add the FICA and supplementary benefits costs, the total package runs to: $40,677 per school…. If contracted out to a guard service, the average rate if including fees and contract costs, averages close to $50 per hour used. The contracts per year would range around $78,000 per school… but at the benefit that all liability falls upon the service and not the educational department of the state of Delaware.
So for manning these position, Delaware has two options, government versus private, and as it always works out in everything in life, government is the cheaper. $8,664,201 versus $16,614,000
So for a minimum of $8,664,201 a year in personnel costs plus the $532,500 in buying and installing the metal detectors, the first year estimate for that should be close to $9.200,000 dollars with $8,664,201 being spent every year thereafter.
If this is levied to property owners, the average property owner will be charged, of course assuming that Senior Citizens don’t get out of the fee for policies they support, the fee is $0.0001 per square foot or one/hundredith of a penny per square foot. {$8,664,201/(2490 X 27,878,400)} If one exempts state land, or makes other exemptions, that cost will rise per private property owner as is to be expected. …
Or if one wishes to allocate that cost per resident, then the assessment rounds up to {$8,664,201 / 917,000} = $9.44 per inhabitant. That is the price of security. A family of 4 should be willing to ante up $37.79 dollars for keeping children safe…
But, the argument gets quickly raised, as it does with money, … shouldn’t those responsible for creating the problem be the ones to pay for its solution? Those would be owner of guns. We can’t publish the amounts for confidentiality reasons. But the gross sales of Miller’s Gunshop alone as reported this quarter to the Delaware Dept of Revenue, argues that a fair assessment on all gun and ammunition sales at at sales tax rate of 10% would be more than adequate to cover implementing the security of all of Delaware’s schools.
The $8 million a year should not out of a child’s education. It should come from those those actions are the direct creation of the problem in the first place.
So lets securitize our schools, and make the NRA and all gun owners pay for it… Fair is simply fair. If we had a registry of all weapons in this country, we wouldn’t be having this problem. As history will one day determine, the fault lies with no one but the NRA that this common sense legislation was never implemented …..
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May 6, 2013 at 4:27 pm
mike w.
Oh boy, just look at how well the gun control you love so much works……
May 7, 2013 at 2:47 pm
mike w.
Registration keeps a minor who can’t possess a gun from carrying it into a school, which he’s also prohibited from doing? How so?
Oh wait, it doesn’t. Registration would keep things like this from happening like being forced to register kitchen knives would prevent stabbings, or vehicle registration prevents people from committing crimes like vehicular homicide.