Pennsylvania High School Adds Secure Vestibule with Bullet-Resistant Glass

Pennsylvania High School Adds Secure Vestibule with Bullet-Resistant Glass

After a visitor enters through the front door, they step into the vestibule, which contains a security camera and a staff member seated in a small enclosure behind bullet-resistant glass.

In an effort to protect students’ safety, Bradford Area High School now has a secure vestibule entrance on its campus. The vestibule is located inside the building’s front door and has bullet-resistant glass, Principal David Ray told the Bradford Era.

After a visitor enters through the front door, they step into the vestibule, which contains a security camera and a staff member seated in a small enclosure behind bullet-resistant glass. Three staff members from the administrative offices monitor the vestibule in shifts.

Visitors must then identify themselves before they’re admitted through the vestibule door into an area with more locked doors that lead into the main building. They are required to wear the visitor badge provided at the entrance.

According to Ray, students enter the campus in the morning through a single entrance, with supervision from a school resource officer.

“During the school day everybody comes in and out of the main entrance,” Ray said. “They’ve been doing that for over a year now.”

Ray said that on average, 100 or more people enter and exit the front entrance of the school per day. This number is included in the estimated 1,000 people who move throughout the building every day, including 670 students and 80 staff members.

“We have a lot of agency people [who come through] and a large number of students who go to classes at [the University of Pittsburgh at Bradford] or go out for co-op work experiences” or doctor appointments, he said. “It’s a very busy entrance and we also have parents who drop stuff off.”

The school entrances are still locked during after-school activities and sporting events, but coaches and other staff members have keys, Ray said.

“If we have, for example, a basketball game, we open the gym entrance, but the rest of the school is gated off and not open to the public,” he said. “If we have something in the auditorium, that entrance [to the school] is gated, so you can enter the auditorium, but you can’t enter the rest of the building.”

There are also security cameras located by all outside doors and throughout the building.

About the Author

Jessica Davis is the Associate Content Editor for 1105 Media.

Featured

  • Securing Higher Education: Combating Enrollment Fraud and Empowering Student Financial Success

    Higher education institutions are facing a costly and growing crisis: enrollment fraud. Between 2020 and 2022, the cost[1] of acquiring a new student surged by up to 32%, straining already tight budgets. At the same time, “ghost students” using stolen identities to enroll fraudulently put institutions at even greater financial risk. Read Now

  • How Composable Security Technologies Fortify Campus Safety

    Campus security teams have faced myriad risks threatening the safety and well-being of students and faculty this semester. Leaders have made tough tradeoffs about where to focus and how to channel limited resources to best protect their communities — but they now have a much-needed lift to their toolkit. Read Now

  • How Emerging Technologies are Transforming the School Security Landscape

    Students can't focus on learning when they're worried about their safety. As education systems nationwide face evolving security challenges with limited resources, a new generation of integrated technology solutions is helping schools create safer environments while maximizing staff efficiency. Read Now

  • How to Harness ALPR for Greater Security Efficiency and Collaboration

    Within higher education campus environments, the demand for greater security, efficiency, and resources is ever-present. Many higher education teams are adopting advanced technologies to secure their campus, streamline operations, and continue to best serve their students and faculty. Automatic license plate recognition (ALPR) technology stands out for its ability to meet a wide range of campus objectives. Read Now