What 2022 Looked Like for School Safety
2022 was a demanding year for school safety professionals. Districts across the country navigated a combination of ongoing health concerns, threats to campus security, and the sustained pressure of operating schools while communities processed a series of high-profile tragedies. The year tested plans, strained staff, and reinforced the importance of preparedness that goes beyond compliance.
Uvalde, Texas, in May brought national attention back to school security with an intensity that had not been seen since Sandy Hook. The response from districts was widespread: security audits, policy reviews, and increased investment in training. But attention generated by tragedy is not a substitute for sustained commitment to safety culture.
Looking back honestly at 2022 means examining not only what happened but how schools responded, what worked, and where the gaps became visible. Those observations are the foundation for meaningful improvements in the year ahead.
Health and Safety Overlaps in 2022
School nurses, counselors, and health staff carried an outsized load in 2022. COVID protocols were still in place at the start of the year, and by fall the emergence of simultaneous respiratory illness surges added new pressure to health offices that were already stretched thin. The overlap of communicable disease management and behavioral health needs created staffing challenges few districts had fully planned for.
Mental health demand continued to increase throughout the year. Students returning to full in-person learning after pandemic disruptions brought elevated rates of anxiety, behavioral challenges, and crisis presentations. Schools without robust mental health infrastructure found themselves managing acute situations with inadequate support systems.
What the Data Tells Us About Threats and Response
Threat assessment teams became a more visible part of school safety infrastructure in 2022. As reporting mechanisms improved and staff received more training in recognizing warning signs, the volume of threat reports schools had to evaluate increased. This is not necessarily a sign that schools became more dangerous. It often reflects improved detection and reporting culture.
Response times and communication clarity remained areas of documented difficulty. After-action reports from incidents across the country consistently identified the same failure points: unclear command structures, outdated contact information, and staff uncertainty about roles. These are correctable problems, and they are precisely what a well-maintained safety program should address before an event occurs.
Carrying the Lessons of 2022 Forward
Every difficult year produces useful information for institutions willing to examine it honestly. 2022 made clear that school safety cannot be treated as a discrete department or a one-time project. It requires coordination across administration, security, health, counseling, facilities, and community partners. Programs that operated in silos showed the strain.
The most consistent finding from 2022 is that preparation matters more than reaction. Schools with trained staff, practiced procedures, and regular plan reviews fared better in emergencies than schools that relied on improvisation. That finding is not new, but it was reinforced across many different types of incidents throughout the year.
Heading into 2023, the opportunity is to take what was learned under pressure and build it deliberately into the systems that govern daily school operations. That work is incremental, often unglamorous, and consistently worthwhile.
