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<div>There was a discussion a year or so ago about this situation in a college campus setting. But the basic individual response Is like Christie says. Run if you can, hide if you cant. Barricade into your safe room. </div><div><br></div><div> If all that fails, attack with whatever means that you have available. This is a list of theater technical folks. We have workshops full of dangerous weapons if needs must. Ferinstance, Bad guy can't see to aim his weapon after a face full of wd40. </div><div><br></div><div>Dale</div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div><br></div><div id="composer_signature"><div style="font-size:88%;color:#364f67" dir="auto">Sent from my Verizon 4G LTE smartphone</div></div><br><br>-------- Original message --------<br>From: Chip Wood via Stagecraft <stagecraft@theatrical.net> <br>Date: 10/16/16 17:22 (GMT-05:00) <br>To: Stagecraft <stagecraft@theatrical.net> <br>Cc: Chip Wood <chip.a.wood@gmail.com> <br>Subject: [SML] Security: Active shooter <br><br>My wife is a Docent at the Phoenix Art Museum and their Security guy <br>gave them a briefing yesterday on how to deal w/ an active shooter. We <br>have discussed many security related topics , esp fire, on this list, <br>but never this one. Given today's political climate and incidents in <br>crowded places, it seems to be very relevant. Is this briefing common <br>in your training?<br><br>Chip 1<br><br><br>____________________________________________________________<br>For list information see <http://stagecraft.theprices.net/><br>Stagecraft mailing list<br>Stagecraft@theatrical.net<br>http://theatrical.net/mailman/listinfo/stagecraft_theatrical.net<br></body></html>