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Bulletproof backpack sales rise as school year start

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Back-to-school shopping usually means new clothes, shoes and notebooks, but this year, some students will be sporting another new accessory on the first day鈥攂ulletproof backpacks.
Over the last six years, in the United States. Described as bulletproof鈥攐r more accurately, bullet-resistant鈥攖hese backpacks are being sold around the country to parents hoping that the extra measure of protection will save their children in the event of a shooting.

Sales surge

The backpacks can , but some manufacturers also market designed to fit into conventional backpacks for less than $100.

Demand for the backpacks first surged after last year’s tragedy at Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida, but some reports claim sales of the protective backpacks have now risen since the recent mass shootings in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton, Ohio.

Some companies have expanded their product lines with bulletproof , , and even that can be used as shields.

Although the demand is being driven by worried parents, schools and districts do not require these products.
Jeffrey W. Granatino, in Massachusetts, said he was saddened that students and their families would even think about purchasing bulletproof backpacks.

鈥淯nfortunately, this is a new reality for students and schools across the country,鈥 Granatino . 鈥淚f these backpacks provide an added sense of security for the student, then it’s a good thing.鈥

Most experts, however, claim that the backpacks, inserts and other items can be ineffective during a real shooting event unless they are used properly.

The leading brands carry a rating, which means they can resist bullets from handguns鈥斺攂ut they are , including the AR-15 carbines that were used in the Sandy Hook, Connecticut, and Parkland school tragedies, as well as the El Paso Walmart tragedy that left 22 dead and many more injured.

Expert opinions

Protective backpacks鈥攁s well as metal detectors and surveillance cameras鈥攁re largely ineffective when it comes to preventing violence, says Jagdish Khubchandani, a health science professor at Ball State University in Indiana and co-author of a report called 鈥School Firearm Violence Prevention Practices and Policies: Functional or Folly?
鈥淭o the extent that schools adopt ineffective firearm violence-prevention measures, they are creating a false sense of security,鈥 Khubchandani says.

Khubchandani and other experts argue that backpacks and similar products treat the symptom, but not the underlying disease.
鈥淭here are some common-sense things that we talk about, such as making sure that people who are known to be dangerous and unstable do not have access to guns,鈥 says Matthew Mayer, a professor at Rutgers University Graduate School of Education in New Jersey who specializes in studying school violence. 鈥淭hat’s a no-brainer.鈥

Tim Goral is senior editor.

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