Campus emergency video outlines what to do if a shooter attacks - Action News
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Campus emergency video outlines what to do if a shooter attacks

Alberta's post-secondary schools have gotten together to produce a video showing students and staff what to do if there's a shooter on campus.

Post-secondary school safety video posted in aftermath of California deaths near campus

Alberta's post-secondary schools have joined together to produce a video showing students and staff what to do if there's a shooter on campus.

The short video, screened on Monday at the Southern Alberta Institute of Technology (SAIT) in Calgary and McEwan University in Edmonton, is a dramatization with instructions on what to do in such a situation. It was produced in consultation with police officers.

The video comes after six students werekillednear the campus of the University of California, Santa Barbara. Elliot Rodger, 22, the suspected shooter, is believed to have killed himself.

Closer to home, three security guards wereshot to death in an attempted robbery atthe University of Alberta in 2012.

Students in Calgary were told that, although it's unlikely there will ever be an armed shooter on campus, it's best to be prepared.

Personally give some time to think about where you work, the office and the venues which you take in throughout the day. How do you lock those offices down? How do you put something in front of doors to potentially barricade that to prevent someone from coming in? said Calgary police Sgt. Lee Stanton.

Misnomers such as pulling fire alarms and things of that nature are not always great options, because of course that leads people into the place that we dont want them into.

Barry Cochrane, head of security at SAIT, says if students and staff know what to do, they are more likely to survive a shooting incident.

It's another tool to allow people to inform themselves to make knowledgeable and informed decisions if they should ever find themselves in an event like this.

The videowill be shown at morepost-secondary campuses in Alberta in September.