Comment: Fear of school shootings turn teachers into entrepreneurs

In the United States, this simple $65 piece of steel could save lives in a school attack.

Troutdale school shooting

Students reunited with parents after Troutdale Police respond to an Oregon school shooting at Reynolds High School in Troutdale, Oregon, USA, 10 June 2014. (EPA/Ankur Dholakia)

Daniel Nietzel is a teacher at the Muscatine Community School district in Iowa, not an entrepreneur. But a new gadget that he developed with a group of his colleagues has received nationwide press in the week since its launch.

“The Sleeve” addresses the fear that teachers across the country have faced since a shooter walked into Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut in December 2012, then proceeded to shoot and kill 20 children and six staff members.
(Source: Fighting Chance Solutions)
“There’s not a teacher that goes to work every day that doesn’t somewhere in the back of their mind think that could be a possibility,” Nietzel tells Quartz. “When a locker slams in the doorway at a time of day that it shouldn’t, you go like, was that a gun shot?”

The next question many teachers ask is how to protect their classroom, which is actually harder than it might seem: US schools are now providing training on what to do if a gunman is roaming the halls, andpracticing classroom lockdown drills. But classroom doors in most schools can only be locked from the outside, so there is no easy way for teachers or students to secure them.

To address this problem, Nietzel and his colleagues came up with the Sleeve, a steel piece that slides onto the door closer hinge at the top of classroom doors, and prevents the door from opening.
Fighting Chance Solutions (FCS), the company Nietzel founded with his six colleagues, launched the product with a small press conference in Muscatine, Iowa, on June 10. That same day, in an unfortunate coincidence, a teenager opened firein a school in Oregon, killing another student and then himself. The tragedy propelled the story of the Sleeve into the national media.

The first Sleeves were bought by the local community college, and since then, the company has been contacted by other colleges, military institutions, and schools around the country and abroad. As well as addressing teachers’ fear, the invention offers a solution to a problem all these institutions are facing: how to make doors lockable from inside without replacing them. The company is now fielding orders ranging from single units (purchased directly by teachers) to tens of thousands (several school districts have expressed interest).

Nietzel and his colleagues came up with the idea for the Sleeve after a teacher-training last fall, where they were advised to try and keep the door closed by tying a computer cord or a belt around the door closer arm on top of the door—an infuriatingly ineffective method, he said.

Indeed, during the demonstration, teachers tried this approach in five classrooms, but a man simulating a shooter was able to enter the room each time. “I kept thinking…in this day and age, in the 21st century, what you want us to do is tie a knot around the door closers? And essentially you tell us ‘If it doesn’t work, good luck’?’” he said.

It took about 10 months for FCS’s team, with the help of architect and engineer friends, to go from the first prototype of the Sleeve (made out of a rubber container) to the fourteenth, and final, model.

A single-purpose tool, the sleeve sells for $65—more palatable than the estimated $300 to $600 that FCS estimates would be needed to replace a door with one that it could be locked from the inside. The company is marketing it directly to teachers, so that they don’t have to wait for the district or school to purchase the device, says Nietzel. The company is also offering bulk ordering, but he said school districts can be slow to react.

Nietzel says he envisions teachers carrying the sleeve in a purse, or having it in their drawer, rather than keeping it on display. After the door is secured, the teacher can try to calm down the kids in the classroom, he said, and help them to safety, whether that means “evacuating out the window, or staying on the floor where they can’t get shot.”

The Oregon shooting increased the attention to the product as it was launched, he said: “The reporters were all still there and they were holding the product in their hands, and they were watching the school shooting unfold, and you could see that it really had a profound effect on them.”

The FCS members, who didn’t expect the product to be this successful, are taking advantage of their summer break to work on their venture full-time, which is also bringing business to the community: The manufacturer, Fabricators Plus, employs 125 people. “We are 100% based out of Musketeen Iowa—from the people who make our product to the people who make our polo shirts when we go out and talk to people,” Nietzel said.

Nietzel does not plan to turn into a full-time entrepreneur just yet, but he doesn’t rule it out. “I never want to leave education, but I also understand that there might be a time where I need to dedicate a little more time to this and to student safety.”

This article was originally published on Quartz. Click here to view the original. © All rights reserved. Distributed by Tribune Content Agency.

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By Annalisa Merelli


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