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School district in Southern California arms its officers with semiautomatic rifles

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Fontana, California, Unified School District police department chief Billy Green speaks to media on Wednesday, January 23, 2013, about arming school police officers with semi-automatic rifles, drawing sharp criticism from some in the community who oppose having such weapons on campuses. The rifles, which cost about $1,000 each, were purchased by the district in October and they arrived in December, before the school massacre in Newtown, Connecticut. (Photo by Irfan Khan/Los Angeles Times/MCT)

(MCT) — LOS ANGELES — Police officers in the Fontana Unified School District in San Bernardino County were armed recently with semiautomatic rifles, drawing sharp criticism and sparking an effort to ban such weapons on school campuses.

The Colt rifles, which cost about $1,000 each, are kept in safes when officers are on campus and will be used only in “extreme emergency cases” like the massacre in Newtown, Conn., Superintendent Cali Olsen-Binks said.

The district purchased the rifles in October and received them in December, before the tragedy in Newtown, where a gunman killed 26 people — 20 of them children — at an elementary school. The shooting sparked debate on whether armed school guards could prevent these types of tragedies.

The purchase was not spurred by a specific event, Fontana Unified School District Police Chief Billy Green said. The rifles are designed to increase shooting accuracy and provide the 14 officers with more effective power against assailants wearing body armor, Green said, adding that those capabilities are necessary for officers to stop a well-armed gunman.

“If you know of a better way to stop someone on campus that’s killing children or staff members with a rifle, I’d like to hear it,” he said. “I don’t think it’s best to send my people in to stop them with just handguns.

“I hope we would never have to use it,” Green said. “But if we do, I’d like them to be prepared.”

Several other school districts have similar weapons but policies differ on whether they are brought on campus or left in patrol car trunks or administration buildings.

Fontana school police bought the guns for about $14,000, which fell below the threshold that requires school board approval. School board members were not informed until after the purchase.

Board member Leticia Garcia said the police chief and superintendent should have alerted the five-member board and held a public hearing on the issue. She said arming officers with such weapons is a policy matter and should have been decided by the entire school district community, especially in light of the ongoing debate around the country.

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