Safety Guide for Bulletproof Backpacks

 

Tips for keeping you or your child safe in an active shooter incident at school, work or public places with Safe At My School - Bulletproof Backpack inserts from TuffyPacks.

It’s a fallacy to believe that a passive response or relying on a locked door will always maximize survival chances. At Safe At My School, we encourage individuals to participate in their own survival—to read the situation and make decisions in the moment. 

  1. Run
  2. Hide
  3. Fight

Your Responsibility as Parents Is To Explain the Do’s and Don’ts to your children.

Do exit if safe to do so

Stay out of the shooter's direct line of sight and do not present a target by running in front of him. Instead, stay low, crawl if you have to, and use furniture to obstruct the shooter's view. Use a zigzag motion when you run or move from one protective object to another until you can safely run far from the scene. When running away from a shooter. The Pack should be worn as intended with head lowered and arms folded in front of the body when running away from the shooter.

 

Do find cover

Find cover that will protect you from bullets. Cover includes items like brick walls, steel beams, or large pieces of furniture or equipment that will stop a bullet. Outside examples of cover include large trees, concrete tables, or steel drainage culverts. Use your BulletProof Backpack as a shield and position it between you and the threat.

 

Do conceal yourself

Conceal yourself from the shooter’s line of sight. Make yourself difficult to see by hiding behind copiers, in closets, cabinets or other secure rooms. In gymnasiums, hide under the bleachers or in auditoriums and conceal yourself behind curtains or between rows of seats. Outdoors, thick bushes or tree lines, or even large trash cans or storage containers may hide you.  Again, use your BulletProof Backpack as a shield and position it between you and the threat.

Do present a small target

Present a small target whether you are exiting the scene, hiding behind protective cover, or concealing yourself from the offender. If exiting, crawl or run in a crouched position if necessary. When hiding you should make yourself as small a target as possible trying to always keep the Pack towards the threat.

 

Do call or text for help

As soon as you can safely do so, call or text for help to ensure that first responders are notified. Provide the police with the location of the incident, your location, and any other important information such as a description of the shooter, types of weapons used, and his last known location.

 

Don't carry anything while running

When your life is at stake, you need to be able to run as fast as you can when the time is right. Be ready to run by dropping everything except your BulletProof Pack. Don’t worry about your food on the lunch table or homework assignment on the desk. You want to be able to leave the area as quickly as possible.

 

Don’t hide in shooter’s line of sight

Just ducking under a table in an otherwise open cafeteria or classroom is usually not a successful tactic if you remain in the shooter’s primary line of sight. A much better option is to keep moving from table to table in the opposite direction of where the shooter is moving. Stay low and as concealed as possible while looking for an opportunity to exit.

 

Don’t plead for your life

Pleading for your life may seem like a good tactic, but because of the lack of empathy of most shooters, pleading rarely works. If you have no other options, playing dead has actually been successful on a number of occasions.

 

A school shooting incident is dynamic and ever-changing. Actions taken by victims must be based on the information they have at the time of the event, making the best decisions possible based on the circumstances and the totality of the information available. Being confronted by an active shooter is a traumatic event, but one that can be survived given the right circumstances, proper training, and correct actions taken by those involved.

 

IMPORTANT NOTE: Parents, if your child has a ballistic shield in his or her backpack, please instruct your child to NOT disclose this to the other children in their classroom or at school. In the event of an imminent shooting threat, your child’s backpack could be taken by another student.

 

Your child should always have easy access to the Pack whether at their desk or at the closest location used for storage such as hooks or racks. For the younger children, practice having them make themselves “small”. In other words, if they are not able to flee or take cover, the Pack will become the only defensive item they have. Look at the photos above and remind your child how important their BulletProof Pack will be in an emergency.  If you have to fight, put your backpack on in front of you covering your chest with your arms through the straps so your hands are free to defend yourself.