Whitney Young H.S. implements metal detectors, searches in response to threat

SHARE Whitney Young H.S. implements metal detectors, searches in response to threat
whitney_young_exterior.jpg

Whitney Young Magnet High School, 211 S. Laflin St. | Sun-Times file photo

Whitney Young Magnet High School students will have to pass through metal detectors and will be subject to searches in response to a threat found Friday inside a bathroom stall.

The new security measures were detailed in an email sent to parents Monday by Principal Joyce Kenner.

“All students will go through metal detectors each day until further notice,” Kenner wrote in the email. “All student possessions are subject to be searched. Wednesday, December 5, 2018 will be declared as a ‘soft lockdown’ day.”

As part of the lockdown, students will not be permitted to go off campus for lunch and any student caught outside the building will be given a one-day, out-of-school suspension, according to Kenner. There will be a “heavy police presence” in and around the building’s and students will be required to use the school’s bridges “without exception” to travel to and from classes.

Students will also face suspension “if caught opening a door for anyone (this includes brother, sister, mother, father, etc.),” Kenner wrote.

“This is the only way we continue to keep our community safe,” Kenner added. “We are a family and this is our home away from home. Everyone must take ownership of their environment. We understand everyone has issues, but be mindful they can be resolved.”

The increased security was implemented after a threat reading “You will all pay 12/5” was found written in a boys’ bathroom stall on Friday, according to the email and a photo provided by Whitney Young parent JaNina Davis.

The message found at the Near West Side school was reported to administrators by a concerned student, according to CPS spokeswoman Emily Bolton.

“Student safety is the district’s top priority and all potential threats are taken very seriously,” Bolton said in a statement Sunday. “The district is working with CPD and will be providing extra security and vigilance as the investigation remains ongoing.”

The Latest
“I remember coming out of my apartment one day and spotting Chicago cops dragging young protestors out of one section of Lincoln Park and shoving them into trucks, while nearby poet Allen Ginsberg was chanting in a circle of peaceful protesters not far away from the radical Abby Hoffman,” remembers Dan Webb, who later became a U.S. attorney.
Concerts by 21 Savage, New Kids on the Block, Vampire Weekend are among the shows available through the promotion.
The building where the outsider artist lived and worked for 40 years, now a rehabilitated five-bedroom home, will be listed for just under $2.6 million.