Corporal Pamela Revels freely dispenses hugs at the schools where she works around Auburn, Ala. But she is also a sheriff’s deputy who wears a bulletproof vest and has an AR-15 semiautomatic rifle stored nearby. When a report came in about a man in camouflage carrying a gun near school, she sprang into action. As worried students and teachers locked themselves in classrooms, she bolted outdoors, hurriedly walked around the sprawling campus until she was satisfied that it was safe. “I can turn into a mama bear really quick,” she said. “And I’ve made that decision that nobody is going to hurt my babies if I can help it.” For millions of students, the first adult they see every day at school is not a teacher. It is a “school resource officer” like Corporal Revels, an often-overlooked role in law enforcement that is now under the national glare. Their duties range from perking up sullen students to directing bus traffic to keeping an eye out for threats. It is that responsibility as the first line of defense that is getting the most attention, as questions swirl over whether the school resource officer at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida failed to do his job on Feb. 14 as a former student, Nikolas Cruz, shot 17 people to death. The position is an unusual hybrid of counselor, educator and cop, and perhaps no other job better personifies America’s shifting ideas about schools, policing and safety. @audramelton took this photo of Corporal Revels hugging 11-year-old Madison Dean. Visit the link in our profile to read more.

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Corporal Pamela Revels freely dispenses hugs at the schools where she works around Auburn, Ala. But she is also a sheriff’s deputy who wears a bulletproof vest and has an AR-15 semiautomatic rifle stored nearby. When a report came in about a man in camouflage carrying a gun near school, she sprang into action. As worried students and teachers locked themselves in classrooms, she bolted outdoors, hurriedly walked around the sprawling campus until she was satisfied that it was safe. “I can turn into a mama bear really quick,” she said. “And I’ve made that decision that nobody is going to hurt my babies if I can help it.” For millions of students, the first adult they see every day at school is not a teacher. It is a “school resource officer” like Corporal Revels, an often-overlooked role in law enforcement that is now under the national glare. Their duties range from perking up sullen students to directing bus traffic to keeping an eye out for threats. It is that responsibility as the first line of defense that is getting the most attention, as questions swirl over whether the school resource officer at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Florida failed to do his job on Feb. 14 as a former student, Nikolas Cruz, shot 17 people to death. The position is an unusual hybrid of counselor, educator and cop, and perhaps no other job better personifies America’s shifting ideas about schools, policing and safety. @audramelton took this photo of Corporal Revels hugging 11-year-old Madison Dean. Visit the link in our profile to read more.


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