Orange County business, residents briefed on what to do in active shooter situations

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GOSHEN – Responding to the fear of active shooters in schools, businesses
and other public places becoming more widespread, Orange County Government
has taken action to help educate the public on how to be prepared should
they find themselves in such a situation.

At the 911 Center in Goshen on Wednesday, Orange County Government and
the Orange County Chamber of Commerce sponsored the county’s first
active shooter training to be open to the public.

Law enforcement instructors Capt. Anthony Weed and Lt. Duane Lopez, both
of the Special Operations Group of the sheriff’s office, walked
attendees through the various steps to take in an active shooter situation
and showed them graphic re-enactment videos, along with mock-recordings
and actual news footage, to help those there imagine the setting of an
actual incidence.

District Attorney David Hoovler said the idea of opening the active shooter
training to the public is to promote safety as well as to communicate
that these situations can happen to anyone, anywhere and individuals should
always be prepared.

“You have to be prepared in the ordinary course of your everyday
life that these situations can happen,” said Hoovler. “You
have to know where the ingress and egress is to the room that you’re
in. You have to be aware of your surroundings at all times because of
the situation in the world that we live in and I think that the goal here
today is to make people aware of that and to train them, the things that
they can do to prepare them, if they’re found in one of these situations
where they best have the chance to survive and save their loved ones.”

There are several acronyms and mnemonics that stipulate the order and
actions one should take in an active shooter situation, but the one being
utilized in the training Wednesday was RHF: Run, Hide and Fight, meant
to be executed in that order. Individuals are encouraged to run if they
are in a safe area. If they are not in a safe area, they should use anything
they can to barricade all entrances to the room that they’re in,
be quite and hide until a uniformed officer, with an administrator of
that building, escorts them out. Should both of those not be viable options,
individuals are encouraged to fight, aggressively and confidently engaging
the attacker with any available items that can be used as weapons. This,
however, is a last resort but, the instructors of the training reiterated
to the public that they do, in fact, have the right to defend themselves
if an attacker threatens their life.

(l-r) Sheriff Carl DuBois, DA David Hoovler and County Executive
Steven Neuhaus

In addition to the public training, Orange County Government is also
making a commitment to the public by offering follow-up visits with the
DA, County Executive and Sheriff’s Offices to any school, business
or other place in the county that requests it, to do a walk-around of
the specific area and provide area-specific advice for active shooter
situations.

County Executive Steven Neuhaus said the public has voiced their growing
concerns regarding the issue and the county is responding.

“They’ve asked us, a number of people, ‘What can we
do to protect ourselves?’; so, we start by giving this two hour
lecture, then we follow it up by a personal visit by the Orange County
Sheriff’s Office, myself, the DA and our experts walk through the
facilities, whether it’s a school, whether it’s a business,
whether it’s any type of public assembly place and we walk them
through how they can improve the safety and protection of their facility,”
said Neuhaus.

 




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