Students, parents fight fears, return to school
New security includes armed guards, locks
By Dave Kolpack
Associated Press
RED LAKE, Minn. - Students and their parents who overcame their fears and attended orientation at Red Lake High School on Thursday returned to a changed place.
A long welcome mat declared the school "violence free." A metal detector was just inside the front door. Three armed guards patrolled the halls. Deadbolt locks were being installed in classroom doors, and more security cameras were going up.
All were visible signs of an effort to make students feel safer upon returning to the classrooms where eight people were killed last March, in the worst school shooting since Columbine.
Students scared
Red Lake Police Officer Amber Auginash, one of the armed guards, said some of the students seemed a little scared.
"I think that's understandable," Auginash said. "I'm hoping to help change that and make the students feel comfortable about being here. I want them to feel free to talk to me."
By the day's end, school officials expected about 75 students with their parents to tour the school, fill out forms and learn about the security improvements during the first of two days of orientation sessions. Classes were scheduled to resume Tuesday.
Returnees praised
School officials praised those who decided to return, six months after 16-year-old Jeffrey Weise walked through the school killing seven people before shooting himself in a classroom. The FBI determined he fired 45 times.
"Heroes are still afraid, but they don't let that fear dominate their lives," Principal Chris Dunshee told about two dozen students and their parents gathered in the gym. "Our students coming back this fall are real warriors."
He compared the high school on the isolated reservation in northwestern Minnesota to the devastation in New Orleans, as the sound of power tools could be heard in the background.
"In the same manner, we have started to rebuild our infrastructure at the school," he said. "We've made changes, and changes for the better."
Esther Spears, the parent of a ninth grader, said she didn't sleep very well Wednesday night. "Yes, there's some excitement and anxiety there," she said. "But it's OK. They had to come back. It will be better."
Cleansing ceremony
Before addressing the students in the gym, Dunshee, Superintendent Stuart Desjarlait and other staff members went through a traditional smudging ceremony by inhaling the fumes of burning sage.
"It's a cleansing ceremony, and it's something we try to do every day," Desjarlait said.
Desjarlait, who took a three-week leave after the shooting, said earlier this month that he had been diagnosed with post-traumatic stress and was still seeing a counselor. He was in the building March 21 and heard the gunshots.
Medical leaves
Three teachers remain on medical leave until psychologists tell them they can return.
Desjarlait said he was glad to have the students back in the school, but stopped short of saying that he was relieved. "I'm never relieved," he said. "Maybe a couple of years down the road, when we get things back in place."
The classroom where most of the students died will never be a classroom again, he said. It will serve as a surveillance room where the safety of students will be monitored.
The school district worked over the summer to reassure students and their families that the school would be safe.
There were fears that many students would not return.
More than 50 have enrolled in nearby schools outside the district.