Report: Accelerated Growth Projections Create Need for 2 New Elementary Schools by 2027-28

Report: Accelerated Growth Projections Create Need for 2 New Elementary Schools by 2027-28

From Monthly bill Horner III, Chatham News + Report

Scholar inhabitants advancement from new citizens within just Chatham Park and projected progress from new industries these kinds of as VinFast and FedEx will necessitate the building of new elementary educational institutions within just the prepared community’s Northern Village and Southern Village — to open up in time for the 2027-28 school calendar year — and the rebuilding of Moncure Faculty, Chatham County Board of Education and learning customers had been advised Monday.

A presentation led by Chief Operations Officer Chris Blice and Director of Servicing and Building Randy Drumheller mentioned Chatham County progress projections have accelerated in the last couple months.

A December 2021 projection approximated that about 1,000 supplemental college students from new people moving to Chatham Park would enroll in CCS in between 2022-23 and 2031-32. New projections, even though, display that selection could be closer to 3,000 students. Two new elementary colleges, an expanded Moncure Faculty, further classroom space at Margaret Pollard Middle University and redistricting in some parts of the county would accommodate the advancement, Blice and Drumheller instructed the board at its typical meeting in the Central Solutions board place at CCS’s central business office on West Street in Pittsboro.

OREd’s involvement

Thomas Dudley, the program supervisor for the Functions Investigate and Education and learning Laboratory (OREd), also took element in the presentation. OREd is a portion of the Institute for Transportation Analysis and Education at N.C. Point out and offers details-pushed facilities arranging alternatives to faculty districts throughout North Carolina and 3 other states. OREd’s work addresses district inhabitants and enrollment projections, identifying the site of new faculty websites, building new attendance boundaries, and examining demographic balance.

Those accelerated development projections and college capacity wants in Chatham County will be reassessed in January after OREd completes a full land use review new projections will also contain possible enrollment growth economic enhancement in the western component of the county.

But for ideal now, indications demonstrate:

  • a new elementary college in Chatham Park’s Northern Village, to be designed starting in 2024, would alleviate projected overcrowding at Perry Harrison Elementary and will supply necessary classroom capacity for each Chatham Park and Perry Harrison/Chatham Grove PreK-5th grade learners
  • a new elementary faculty in Chatham Park’s Southern Village, also to be made starting in 2024, would handle the projected elementary university student requirements there and could serve as temporary “swing space” to aid the attainable demolition and reconstruction of the recent Moncure Faculty, which serves a K-8th grade college student inhabitants
  • dependent on a feasibility study, the greater rebuilt Moncure University — to be intended commencing in 2026 and open up in the slide of 2029 — would handle enrollment desires from the projected non-Chatham Park K-8th quality university student inhabitants progress and the projected new Chatham Park Southern Village 6th-8th quality college student population, which will be impacted by new industries VinFast and FedEx, which program amenities close by.

Offered recent serviceable enrollment capability, Seaforth Significant School, Northwood Substantial School and George Moses Horton Center Faculty are massive sufficient to meet up with projections, but capability at Chatham Grove Elementary will will need also addressed, Blice mentioned.

The most substantial problems, though, are at Perry Harrison Elementary, which has a ability of 694 college students, and Moncure College, with a ability of 444. New 10-12 months projections put university student enrollment at people educational institutions at 1,250 and 1,334 students, respectively.

Blice termed individuals quantities “conservative.”

Funding for the construction of new educational facilities and expansion of present colleges will need to be secured from Chatham County through its Cash Improvement Prepare procedure. No expense estimates were being offered or discussed.

Board member David Hamm reported the school program necessary to be intense in pondering about accommodating pupil wants.

“We’re on the side of the 8-ball appropriate now,” he mentioned. “We do not have to have to get at the rear of the 8-ball.”

A entire copy of the presentation can be found at https://simbli.eboardsolutions.com/meetings/TempFolder/Meetings/OREd{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf}20Update{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf}207.18.2022_329926cdtymc5q4k3xjvthjemzoe1o.pdf.

In other company, the board:

  • voted unanimously, just after hearing a presentation from Main Finance Officer Tony Messer and Faculty Nutrition Company Supervisor Cecile Teague, to enhance the rate of college foods by 50 cents. Breakfasts will now value $2 each individual, while lunches will enhance to $3.50 every single. The selling price will increase are pushed by mandated increased wage charges for diet personnel and increased supply prices for foodstuff.
  • unanimously accredited an updated 2022-23 College Nutrition Supervisor fork out scale, which furnished pay adjustments to accommodate the new minimal hourly wage for school diet staff. The shift this fiscal calendar year to a bigger bare minimum wage — $15 for each hour for all long lasting, entire-time state workforce — impacted about 50 {e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of CCS’s diet staff members. The $250,000 price of the better pay scale will be mitigated by meal price boosts.
  • heard a 1st read through of a draft of CCS’s new “One Chatham,” its 5-yr strategic plan, from Dr. Amanda Moran, assistant superintendent for educational services & tutorial support, and Community Info Officer Nancy Wykle. The 2022-2027 approach, formulated throughout a sequence of emphasis groups, the superintendent’s “listening tour” and group surveys, will be shared at CCS’ convocation in August and offered publicly shortly after. Moran and Wykle provided an overview of the not-however-done document, which the pair explained as a “living document” with measurable plans and development monitors addressing additional than 100 methods and a dozen or so important plans.
  • listened to a request all through the general public responses part of the assembly from Mary Nettles, the president of the Eastern Chatham branch of the NAACP, requesting permission for a mural to be installed at George Moses Horton Center College. The mural, to be paid out by for the Neighborhood Remembrance Coalition-Chatham and developed by pointed out Durham-primarily based artist David Wilson, would honor Horton and other African People who contributed to Pittsboro, such as Rev. Rufus V. Horton, Edgar Bland, Lillie Rogers and Isaiah Taylor. Nettles said the mural would be placed on the outside the house back wall of the setting up at the university housing 6th via 8th graders.
  • read Seaforth Superior University university student Hannah Ajayi study her successful essay from a contest sponsored by the Equal Justice Initiative, dependent in Montgomery, Alabama, in partnership with the Local community Remembrance Coalition-Chatham and Chatham County NAACP branches. Pupils ended up requested to study the background of a topic of racial injustice and to talk about its legacy these days Ajayi’s essay appeared in the Could 19 version of the News + Record.
  • listened to an update from Superintendent Dr. Anthony Jackson about CCS’s summer instruction and studying for employees. Jackson offered crucial dates for forthcoming orientation sessions. A back-to-university celebration will be held at Mosaic on Aug. 20, whilst convocation is set for Aug. 24, open up houses on Aug. 25 and the very first day of school on Aug. 29.
  • heard a plea from mother or father John Richardson, who cited what he explained as “lies” from President Biden and Dr. Anthony Fauci, the government’s top rated infectious ailment specialist, as portion of “overwhelming evidence” of the harm masking to prevent COVID-19 unfold results in to learners. “I don’t want us to go down that street again,” Richardson mentioned, referencing required masking guidelines for college students.”
  • acknowledged Janice Frazier, the assistant superintendent for human relations, who’s retiring this month.

Board member Melissa Hlavac was absent from the conference.


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The Chatham Information + Record is Chatham County’s source for regional news and journalism. The Chatham News, proven in 1924, and the Chatham Record, founded in 1878, have appear alongside one another to far better provide the Chatham neighborhood as the Chatham Information + File. Masking information, enterprise, sporting activities and a lot more, the Information + File is functioning to fortify neighborhood ties by means of compelling protection of lifestyle in Chatham County.

 

Manhattan Beach elementary school playground tagged with racist graffiti

Manhattan Beach elementary school playground tagged with racist graffiti
racist-grafiti-2.jpg
Blurred images of racist language and symbols spray painted on a Manhattan Beach front elementary school’s playground that was discovered Thursday morning as youngsters were being on the blacktop. 

CBSLA


A South Bay elementary school experienced hateful, anti-Semitic messages spray painted all around the college playground, the sixth incident of this kind to materialize in the location in the very last calendar year. 

The graffiti, which was spray painted on the blacktop at Meadows Elementary Faculty, probably at night, was found out Thursday morning, while little ones have been out on the playground. 

“It is a intestine punch,” explained a guy who only desired to be determined as JB. “I don’t imagine that is a little something everyone would want their small children exposed to.”

JB stated he wanted to stay anonymous for panic of retaliation from some in the Manhattan Seashore group, but he shared the pics of the anti-Semitic impression and at the very least two circumstances of the N-term spray painted on the playground. 

“Simply because you can find so significantly despise fueled as a result of any person to do anything like that, you can only consider what happens when it can be achieved with exposure,” JB explained. 

The Manhattan Seaside Faculty District reported the racist graffiti was quickly taken off when it was identified Thursday morning. 

It’s the most current in a string of hateful and racist vandalism on at minimum two district campuses. 

“It really is just really unfortunate to see that close to this neighborhood, any neighborhood to be genuine with,” guardian Kent Chiu claimed. “It really is a youngsters playground. We want the youngsters to have a safe and sound position to play.” 

Another mother or father, Fidencio Chaidez, agreed. 

“It is just fairly terrible to truly see one thing like this in the university grounds,” he claimed. 

The incident transpired just a person day right after the return of Bruce’s Beach front, a prime extend of residence in Manhattan Seaside that was formally handed back to the descendants of a Black pair it was seized from extra than a century ago.

LA County Board Approves Plan To Return Bruce's Beach To Black Family
MANHATTAN Beach front, CALIFORNIA – JUNE 29: In an aerial check out, Bruce’s Seashore (C) is wedged between high-priced actual estate on June 29, 2022 in Manhattan Seashore, California. The beachfront residence was as soon as a seaside vacation resort owned by Charles and Willa Bruce, a Black couple, which catered to African Individuals. Amid the Jim Crow period, the town claimed the home in 1924 as a result of eminent domain though vastly underpaying the pair for the land. The Los Angeles County Board of Supervisors has accepted the approach to return ownership of the primary beachfront home to the descendants of Willa and Charles Bruce.

/ Getty Photos


Connected: Manhattan Beach assets seized from Black few formally returned to Bruce family members grandsons

The land was taken from Charles and Willa Bruce, a wealthy Black few, in 1924 employing eminent area. 

“To turn close to and have this occur, it is really virtually like one particular phase forward and a few techniques back again,” JB claimed. 

Metropolis and district leaders condemned the racist act, with Mayor Steve Napolitano releasing a statement that examine in aspect:

“Stupidity may perhaps not be a criminal offense, but what they did is, and we should really all be concerned…We’ve witnessed far also lots of factors like this these days and it requirements to end. Hate has no dwelling in Manhattan Beach. 

Whilst the timing is suspicious, the metropolis said it does not show up that the graffiti is related to the celebration of Bruce’s Seashore. 

In the meantime, police in Manhattan Beach front motivate anyone with information about the incident to speak to the section. 

New Ashland elementary school plans include single-occupant bathrooms

New Ashland elementary school plans include single-occupant bathrooms

Hanover County is in the process of replacing John M. Gandy Elementary Faculty in Ashland. Designs for the new making, talked about at a faculty board assembly final 7 days, contain nongendered, single-occupant bogs. 

Individual bathrooms will be powering floor-to-ceiling partitions, whilst the sink location will be open up to the hallway.

“These rest room rooms are open up to the corridor. Every person stall, the doorways go from the flooring up to the ceiling, and there is no hole,” mentioned Josh Bower, an architect on the venture, through the board assembly. “Every solitary stall has full privateness.”

A Hanover County official also instructed VPM News in an e-mail that in addition to strengthening privacy, the school’s bathroom structure will assist safeguard college students.

“The principal objective of this structure is to maximize student protection, which is of paramount importance to us, and lessen possible injury to restrooms. For occasion, we anticipate this style will support lessen cases of bullying, combating, and vandalism that occur in these spots,” wrote Hanover County Public University spokesperson Chris Whitley.

Wes Perkins, a professor at Hobart and William Smith Colleges in New York condition, stated that displays the standard belief that most bullying takes place in spots with lower supervision, like bogs. But a 2014 review in center educational facilities carried out by Perkins and his colleagues located that was not the situation. 

“The significant photograph was that far more bullying was becoming expert in the hallways, lecture rooms and in the lunchroom,” he claimed. “In 1 feeling, it really should not be shocking for the reason that of the sum of time that is put in [in those areas].”

Perkins stated the personal stalls will not end bullying, but they could aid prevent it in bathrooms, exactly where study shows transgender college students typically sense unsafe. 

“If [students] can have these individualized rooms the place they are not there with any person else, they may possibly sense certainly much more privacy, relatively additional safety,” he explained. “Bullying charges in all those form of environments … may perhaps manifest a lot fewer than it is now.”

Whitley claimed HCPS plans to use the solitary-occupant bathroom structure for all the elementary educational institutions it is preparing to make during the upcoming 5 years. Currently, Battlefield Park and Washington-Henry elementary universities in Mechanicsville are slated for alternative, in addition to Gandy.

The rest room layout is not anticipated to have an effect on the value to build the new educational facilities, according to Whitley.

Rendering of a bathroom design.
Personal bogs at a prepared school in Ashland will be behind floor-to-ceiling partitions, whilst the sink space will be open up to the hallway. (Image: Courtesy Crabtree, Rohrbaugh & Associates)

Stopping faculty bullying

Perkins stated Hanover County need to nevertheless vigilantly pursue anti-bullying actions, especially those that goal harassment that takes place during class. His 2014 research also located that students bullied in the classroom seasoned extra anxiety than people bullied in other destinations. 

One approach Perkins recommended to battle bullying: overtly speaking to children about how widespread it is. About 25-30{e4f787673fbda589a16c4acddca5ba6fa1cbf0bc0eb53f36e5f8309f6ee846cf} of pupils interact in bullying, but learners understand it to be a lot more frequent than that.

“If they assume that most some others are undertaking it, then really a lot more learners engage in the bullying than would usually,” he explained.

In a 2011 study, Perkins and his coauthors discovered that by exhibiting posters in a university that described exact, area info about how unusual bullying was, the actions was reduced. 

“Results showed substantial reductions in problematic misperceptions of the prevalence of bullying and of peer assist for bullying and simultaneous reductions in individual bullying behaviors and ordeals of victimization,” the examine reported. “Students were being also a lot more supportive of reporting bullying to college authorities and mom and dad and they came to believe that that friends more normally supported this conduct than was beforehand believed to be the case.”

Perkins warned that moms and dads, instructors and administrators ought to be energetic in blocking bullying — no make any difference the college and its design.

“We analyzed this information and broke it down by styles of faculties — substantial colleges, modest faculties, center-sized universities — and that did not subject,” he mentioned. “We cannot say that this is some thing where by persons may believe, ‘Well, not at our school, it has a diverse social and demographic characteristic.”

Midway ISD’s new elementary school discusses safety features added to the freshly renovated school

Midway ISD’s new elementary school discusses safety features added to the freshly renovated school

WACO, Texas (KWTX) – Midway ISD’s new elementary university, Chapel Park Elementary, is nearly all set for the impending university calendar year, including safety characteristics and modern-day learning places.

Following the school taking pictures in Uvalde at the conclusion of the final university year, basic safety is a concern for quite a few pupils, instructors and moms and dads.

The new principal, Kim Hawkins, claimed the college just extra a few much more touches to the currently-harmless developing.

“Safety is a little something that I believe, at Halfway, we do quite effectively,” Hawkins mentioned. “We’re just likely to sort of beef that up a minimal bit.”

Hawkins stated the faculty added a new type of lock that displays eco-friendly when unlocked and purple when locked. The college also extra bullet resistant glass to the entrance doors.

The up-to-date alarm system has voice recognition, and the alarms are situated in each classroom.

Instructors can also verify in students digitally on telephones, iPads or personal computers to come across in which college students are positioned, specifically in drills and emergencies.

Even though cameras and on-web-site protection are important to safeguard the pupils, Hawkins stated instruction is a big component of maintaining anyone harmless.

“We have tabletop exercise routines that we choose staff via so that we’re normally considering of what could happen, what would we do, as nicely as training our young ones the very same way, where it’s a purely natural issue for them,” Hawkins said. “But, it is a little something that I believe that we product enough that we’re going to be well prepared.”

Midway ISD also claimed they approach to target more on mental health as perfectly.

Protection features is not the only issue the faculty added.

Chapel Park Elementary is one particular of the universities that obtained income from a bond in 2019. This bond is intended to develop additional area for elementary learners in the district. Even so, they utilized this as an prospect to also modernize the finding out natural environment.

“A college bond will allow us to have more cash for facilities than we would ordinarily have in an operational yr,” Midway ISD director of communications, Traci Marlin, explained. “We’re equipped to add matters to our university amenities as a result of renovations and new development that are even additional fashionable and additional ahead thinking.”

Mainly because Halfway ISD transformed an intermediate university, which is fifth and sixth grades, into an elementary school, they experienced to make some adjustments.

This meant more substantial school rooms, and they experienced to include much more bogs for courses.

The college acquired rid of the lockers in the hallways and included collaboration stations.

“One of the most significant items that we really required to emphasize is the collaboration,” Hawkins explained. “We want our youngsters to be ready to master with each other and have these spaces exactly where academics and college students can work alongside one another.”

She also said that the school will give far more innovative finding out possibilities like maker spaces and innovation parts.

“Students will be capable to be uncovered to some of our robotics and some of the tinkering types of environments,” Hawkins explained.

The renovations bundled gutting the office environment, which was in the heart of the college, and changing it with an open up-format, multi-goal library.

This will be the centre of the school, generating a lot more of a collaborative, open up room for learners, instructors and employees.

Midway ISD also modernized classroom basics like chairs and desks.

They added “flexible” furnishings which means college students can conveniently transfer chairs and desks to develop a collaborate finding out natural environment.

Chapel Park Elementary is one particular of the two new Halfway ISD elementary universities opening for the approaching college calendar year. The university district is also opening a center college.

These universities are a aspect of the new rezoning of the district that will get rid of the intermediate universities.

“It realigns superior with the Texas curriculum to have fifth quality in elementary and sixth grade with center college,” Marlin reported.

Chapel Park Elementary even now has some construction remaining like the cafeteria, art, songs and innovation locations, but they are on schedule to be accomplished inside the next couple weeks.

Copyright 2022 KWTX. All legal rights reserved.

These are the 4 key takeaways from the Uvalde shooting investigation report : NPR

These are the 4 key takeaways from the Uvalde shooting investigation report : NPR

Family of shooting victims listen to the Texas House investigative committee release its full report on the shootings at Robb Elementary School, Sunday, July 17, 2022, in Uvalde, Texas.

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Family of shooting victims listen to the Texas House investigative committee release its full report on the shootings at Robb Elementary School, Sunday, July 17, 2022, in Uvalde, Texas.

Eric Gay/AP

When an 18-year-old gunman targeted an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, “systemic failures and egregiously poor decision making” on behalf of law enforcement and school officials failed to stop the shooter from killing 19 students and two teachers, a new investigative report found.

Hundreds of law enforcement officials prioritized their own safety over the lives of students and teachers that day as they waited more than an hour to confront the shooter, according to the 77-page report from a Texas House of Representatives committee.

After weeks of conflicting and inconsistent accounts of the police response, the report gives the public the most complete picture yet of the May 24 massacre at Robb Elementary School. As police fumbled without clear leadership or organization, school staff had grown less vigilant, straying from locked door policies and active shooter procedures.

“There were multiple systemic failures,” Rep. Dustin Burrows, a Republican member of the investigative committee, said in summarizing its findings at a press conference on Sunday, hours after the report’s release.

He warned that those breakdowns in safety aren’t just a problem that exists in Uvalde, adding, “some of the same systems that we found here that failed that day are across the entire state and country.”

Here are some of the key revelations the committee found in their probe.

A lack of leadership despite a robust police presence

In all, 376 law enforcement officers arrived at a scene that was chaotic and uncoordinated, the report says. The group of federal, state and local officials lacked any clear leadership, basic communication and enough urgency to take down the gunman, according to the committee.

Previous official accounts of the shooting placed primary blame on the school district’s Police Chief Pete Arredondo – who is on administrative leave and has since resigned from his position on the City Council — and other local police.

After arriving at the school, Arredondo fumbled around with and eventually abandoned his radio at the fence, the report stated, reasoning that one of the other sergeants was on the scene and was “fully uniformed” with a radio, he testified to the committee.

Uvalde school district’s active shooter policy called for Arredondo to be the incident commander who would’ve been responsible for leaving the building in order to organize a response and to inform other officers that he was in charge. Instead, Arredondo stayed inside the building.

Uvalde School Police Chief Pete Arredondo, third from left, stands during a news conference outside of the Robb Elementary school in Uvalde, Texas Thursday, May 26, 2022.

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Uvalde School Police Chief Pete Arredondo, third from left, stands during a news conference outside of the Robb Elementary school in Uvalde, Texas Thursday, May 26, 2022.

Dario Lopez-Mills/AP

After Arredondo entered the school, he went to classroom 110, which had bullet holes, but no children were inside. He then “prayed” the kids in rooms 111 and 112, where the gunman fired more than 100 rounds, had been emptied as well, he testified.

They had not been, and Arredondo proceeded to handle the incident as one of a “barricaded subject” and not an active shooter, according to the report.

“With the benefit of hindsight, we now know this was a terrible, tragic mistake,” the committee wrote.

Officers said they knew the gunman was in one of the rooms, but did not know what was happening behind the closed doors because they did not hear screams or cries, despite hearing several gunshots ringing out.

Arredondo testified that his assessment of the situation was to prevent the shooter from moving to other classrooms.

“[T]o me … once he’s … in a room, you know, to me, he’s barricaded in a room,” he said. “Our thought was, ‘If he comes out, you know, you eliminate the threat,’ correct? And just the thought of other children being in other classrooms, my thought was, ‘We can’t let him come back out. If he comes back out, we take him out, or we eliminate the threat. Let’s get these children out.”

The report revealed that most of the officers who responded to the incident were from state and federal forces, with 149 from U.S. Border Patrol and 91 from the state police department.

There were 25 city police officers and 16 from the county sheriff’s office. Arredondo’s school police force comprised five of the officers there.

The committee also faults those officers — “many of whom were better trained and better equipped than the school district police” — who it says should have filled the leadership void when they saw the chaotic scene.

“They should’ve begun asking questions and offered their support and guidance, and maybe eventually they would’ve gotten command to have a better response from that,” Rep. Burrows said.

Two officers with the Uvalde Police Department arrived at rooms 111 and 112 minutes after the attacker opened fire. The attacker shot at the officers, who were grazed by bullet fragments and retreated. They did not fire back. One left the building, the report said.

Although law enforcement made multiple missteps that disregarded active shooter training, the report says, it’s not clear that a quicker response from officers once they were on the scene could have prevented the loss of some lives.

Relaxed school security allowed the gunman to attack quickly

Although Robb Elementary had safeguards and active shooter procedures in place, school staff had developed a culture of complacency around such measures. Out of convenience, some teachers frequently left doors unlocked or propped open — a violation of school policy. Due to a shortage of keys, substitute teachers were often told to circumvent locks.

The school was also set up with an intruder alert system. But the frequency of “bailout” alerts, which flag the presence of fleeing human traffickers in the area, desensitized teachers to their urgency. No prior bailout alert had ever resulted in a violent incident at the school.

On the day of the attack, the gunman scaled a 5-foot tall exterior fence before multiple unlocked doors allowed the gunman to enter the classrooms unimpeded, the report found.

“But had school personnel locked the doors as the school’s policy required, that could have slowed his progress for a few precious minutes—long enough to receive alerts, hide children, and lock doors; and long enough to give police more opportunity to engage and stop the attacker,” it read.

Instead, the gunman likely killed most of the victims before any responder entered the building, the committee found: “Of the approximately 142 rounds the attacker fired inside the building, it is almost certain that he rapidly fired over 100 of those rounds before any officer entered.”

The gunman opened fire in his former 4th grade classroom

Reggie Daniels pays his respects a memorial at Robb Elementary School on June 9, 2022, in Uvalde, Texas. Nearly 400 law enforcement officials rushed to the mass shooting that left 21 people dead at the school, but it was more than an hour before the gunman was finally confronted and killed, according to a report from investigators released Sunday, July 17, 2022.

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Reggie Daniels pays his respects a memorial at Robb Elementary School on June 9, 2022, in Uvalde, Texas. Nearly 400 law enforcement officials rushed to the mass shooting that left 21 people dead at the school, but it was more than an hour before the gunman was finally confronted and killed, according to a report from investigators released Sunday, July 17, 2022.

Eric Gay/AP

At 11:33 a.m., the attacker spent two-and-a-half minutes firing more than 100 rounds into rooms 111 and 112.

Room 111 was the same classroom the gunman attended fourth grade, the report revealed. Just weeks before the attack, the shooter had spoken with an acquaintance about bad memories of fourth grade.

His former fourth-grade teacher, who was in the building at the time of the shooting, told the committee he reported being bullied while in the fourth grade. She consulted with the gunman’s mother, and said he eventually began making friends.

The attacker’s family testified that he continued being picked on for his clothes and speech impediment. By 2018, when the gunman was in the ninth grade, he had accumulated more than 100 absences and had failing grades. In 2021, when the attacker was 17, Uvalde High School withdrew him.

“It is unclear whether any school resource officers ever visited the home of the attacker,” the report said.

When he returned to Robb Elementary on the day of the attack, the shooter was able to enter room 111, as the door was not properly secured, according to the report. The lock on room 111 was known to be faulty, and teachers and students would often enter to use the printer.

“Room 111 could be locked, but an extra effort was required to make sure the latch engaged,” the report’s authors said.

The teacher of that classroom, who was injured during the shooting, testified that he would often be admonished by school police about the door, and notified school administration, who said a request had been submitted. The teacher never submitted a work order himself, “as was the apparent practice among Robb Elementary teachers,” the report said.

The head custodian at the school testified that he never knew of any problems with the door, or would have submitted a work order. The principal said administration had been alerted about the door in March.

On the day of the shooting, the teacher for room 111 said he could not remember receiving an alert about an active shooter or if he used extra effort to secure the door.

The attacker shot his grandmother after an altercation about his phone plan

Three minutes after the gunman fired into rooms 111 and 112, Uvalde Police Department dispatch received a call that a woman had been shot in the head, according to the report. It was the gunman’s grandmother.

Before leaving for Robb Elementary School, the gunman and his grandmother had an altercation about his phone that resulted in her making a call to AT&T to remove him from the plan, according to the report.

During the incident, he contacted a female acquaintance in Germany for an hour, and upon hanging up, texted her of his plans to harm his grandmother, the report showed.

“Ima do something to her rn,” he wrote, along with “I just shot my grandma in her head” and “Ima go shoot up a elementary school rn.”

The acquaintance initially responded with “cool,” which she deleted before saying, “I just saw the news.”

He shot his grandmother in the face before stealing her truck, despite not having a driver’s license, and drove to Robb Elementary.

She survived the attack and was released from the hospital June 29, according to CNN.

The attacker began buying firearms accessories in February, and when he turned 18 in May, spent almost $5,000 on two assault rifles and hollow point bullets, which expand upon impact.

The attacker’s uncle drove him to the gun store twice to pick up the rifles, and after his grandmother told him he couldn’t keep guns in her home, his uncle allowed him to stow one of the weapons at his house.

The gunman told an acquaintance he hid the second rifle outside of his grandmother’s home, and brought it inside the night before the massacre.