School security measures offer little reassurance

On July 17, the Gwinnett County School Board approved $23 million for Evolv weapon detectors and additional school resource officers (SROs), framing it as a step toward safer schools. In reality, it’s a costly illusion that avoids the district’s true crisis: failed discipline under Policy JCDI.

Since 2022, Gwinnett County Public Schools has deprioritized consequences in favor of a lenient restorative model. Now, instead of addressing student behavior directly, the district relies on optics — hardware and hallway personnel— to create a false sense of control.

Evolv detectors are unreliable. They’ve been shown to miss real weapons while flagging laptops and binders, causing delays and confusion. Meanwhile, the expansion of SROs offers little reassurance. Under Policy JCDI, many incidents involving violence or weapons are downgraded to avoid involving SROs — despite the public belief that their presence improves safety. In fact, the policy was crafted to reduce their role entirely.

If students who bring weapons or incite violence face no meaningful consequence, what is the point? Safety isn’t achieved through expensive tech or sidelined officers. It starts with structure, accountability, and leadership willing to reverse failed policies.

HOLLY TEREI, LAWRENCEVILLE

Alligator Alcatraz shows our loss of humanity

Recall graphic images of President Trump and Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem inspecting the cage — like migrant center in the Florida Everglades, the magazine pictures of road signs directing people to Alligator Alcatraz, with smiling tourists standing beside them.

Jennifer Schulze, in The Week Magazine, July 18, says Alligator Alcatraz is an American gulag. It has been constructed in a swamp with alligators, pythons, multitudes of mosquitoes and no protection against the state’s 100-degree heat, humidity and hurricanes. There will be no air conditioning for the projected 5,000 migrants.

With President Trump’s mandate to Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE) to arrest 3,000 migrants a day, many will be completely innocent people like moms and dads waiting in Home Depot parking lots to get day jobs.

Is our nation beginning to lose its humanity as well as its democracy?

MARY SCOTT GOULD, DECATUR

White House not interested in ‘truth’

When asked by a reporter why he fired the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, President Trump replied, “We don’t believe her numbers, so I fired her.” No proof, no analysis, no truth; just his belief.

Had the White House physician truthfully reported that Trump is only 6 feet tall, weighs 255 pounds, has a 46-inch waist, and is quite bald, he would likely have been fired for medical malpractice.

In this White House, truth hurts the person who delivers it.

DAVID HORGAN, KENNESAW

Keep Reading

The FBI Atlanta SWAT team arrives at the scene of the shooting near the CDC building on Friday. (Ben Hendren for the AJC)

Credit: Ben Hendren

Featured

Six soldiers were honored, each receiving Meritorious Service Medals, Thursday for heroic actions responding to the shooting at Fort Stewart. “One of the things I can say unequivocally is that the fast action of these soldiers — under stress and under trauma and under fire — absolutely saved lives from being lost,” U.S. Army Secretary Dan Driscoll told reporters as the six soldiers stood near him Thursday. “They are everything that is good about this nation.” (Hyosub Shin/AJC)

Credit: HYOSUB SHIN / AJC