That one thing is this story a teacher told me. "The SWAT team came into my class today," he said. What he called the "SWAT team" was actually unarmed school security. They came into his classroom to check students for weapons. That's the mindset in many school systems in this country. They send, emphasis here—unarmed—security teams into classrooms to search for armed students without any thought to what these folks might do if they find a weapon on a student who is willing to use it. It's the same mindset that keeps rifles out of the hands of sworn SROs.
We don't yet have details on whether the Broward deputy had actually received any practical training on how to engage an active shooter. But I'll bet he didn't. Training is expensive and the only time any municipality or county ever seems to find the money to pay for any training beyond the basics is right after a major incident. To paraphrase the very eloquent Dave Grossman, people are sheep and they "only have two speeds: graze and stampede."
After Parkland the stampede is on. Everyone is trying to find ways to prevent the next school massacre. They want to ban AR-15s, or train teachers to carry and shoot back, or find ways to commit more people to mental hospitals.
Here's my solution. We need deterrence. And the Broward County and South Florida schools especially need deterrence. Experts say school shootings and threats of school shootings have a tendency to reoccur in the same county. The theory is that the publicity surrounding the initial shooting puts the idea of shooting up a school into the minds of people with such leanings either from innate evil, personal grudge, or mental health issues.
Deterrence is not just a matter of having armed personnel or even sworn officers in the schools; it's having the right officer, with the right equipment, and the right training.