Sen. Raatz Sponsored Bill Amended To Prohibit Pellet Gun Firing During School Safety Training

Several teachers were shot with a pellet gun during an active shooter training session at a northern Indiana school last month.

Indiana State Senator Jeff Raatz. Photo by A.J. Waltz.

(Indianapolis, Ind.) – Indiana lawmakers are moving to put restrictions on active shooter training in schools after teachers were shot with a pellet gun at a northern Indiana school.

The Senate Education and Career Development Committee amended a school safety bill on Wednesday to include a provision prohibiting the firing of projectiles at teachers, employees, or students during any drill or training.

The Indiana State Teachers Association asked for lawmakers to take action last month after some teachers at Meadowland Elementary in Monticello were taken into a classroom and shot execution style with pellet guns during ALICE training. The pellets caused welts and bleeding.

Lawmakers also agreed that the training went too far.

House Bill 1004 is sponsored by State Sen. Jeff Raatz (R-Richmond). It would require school corporations to conduct an active-shooter drill each semester. Private and charter schools would have to provide training once each school year.

The legislation also makes changes to requirements for Indiana Secured School Fund, allowing for funds granted to schools to be used for employing school resource officers and providing school-based mental health services. Grant amounts from the Indiana Safe Schools Fund would be changed. Each Indiana public, private and charter school would be required to conduct a threat assessment.

“Ensuring Indiana has measures in place to further protect Hoosier students, teachers and staff is a high priority for me,” Raatz said. “Given the incidents that occurred in our state in 2018, it is important for us to do all we can to keep our schools secure. This bill would make the necessary changes to improve school safety across Indiana.”

Lawmakers in the Senate Appropriations Committee will consider the amended HB 1004 next. If approved there, it would then head to the Senate floor.

RELATED STORIES:

Union Wants Law After Teachers Shot With Pellets During ALICE Training

More from Local News


Events

Man Arrested for Theft of Nearly $1 Million from Elderly Relative

An arrest was made at a Madison hotel on Thursday.

Jim Amos Honored with Robert R. Walsman Award at Annual Golf Outing

Amos served as president and CEO of MMH from 1987 to 2009.

Mel Siefert to Serve as Interim Principal at Batesville High School

He will take over during the second semester.

South Dearborn Names New Softball Head Coach

Mike Cutter revived the middle school program in 2023.

2025 Team Preview: Lawrenceburg Aims to Reclaim Championship Glory

The Tigers have won 6 sectional titles in 9 seasons, but are on a two-year drought.

Local Sports Report - August 20, 2025

Report missing stats and scores to news@eaglecountryonline.com

Brad Paisley The World 19:40
Parmalee Girl in Mine 19:38
Billy Dean We Just Disagree 19:31
Jordan Davis Bar None 19:28