Crime & Safety

Active shooter preparedness: What DFW residents need to know

No one wants to think about this. But DFW has seen mass casualty events and preparation saves lives.

The Run-Hide-Fight framework (developed by the City of Houston, endorsed by DHS):

RUN:

  • Have an escape route in mind wherever you go. Restaurants, malls, offices — know where the exits are.
  • Leave belongings behind.
  • Help others if possible, but don't let them slow you if they won't move.
  • Call 911 when safe.

HIDE:

  • If you can't run, find a room with a lockable door.
  • Turn off lights, silence phone, stay quiet.
  • Barricade the door with furniture.
  • Stay away from windows and doors.

FIGHT:

  • Absolute last resort.
  • Act with aggression. Use improvised weapons (fire extinguisher, chair, anything heavy).
  • Commit fully. Hesitation is the enemy.

When police arrive:

  • Hands visible, fingers spread.
  • Don't run toward officers.
  • Don't grab officers.
  • Follow commands immediately.

Free training:

  • ALERRT (Advanced Law Enforcement Rapid Response Training) — based at Texas State University. Free civilian courses. alerrt.org
  • DHS — "Active Shooter Preparedness" resources at dhs.gov/active-shooter-preparedness
  • Red Cross — "Stop the Bleed" courses teach tourniquet use. Free, offered monthly at Parkland and other DFW hospitals.

Sources:

  • Department of Homeland Security — Active Shooter Preparedness
  • City of Houston/DHS — Run Hide Fight program
  • ALERRT — Texas State University (alerrt.org)
  • American College of Surgeons — Stop the Bleed program

Nobody is coming to save you in the first minutes. Your preparation is the difference.

Community ReportAutomatedSource: Community ReportPublished: Apr 4, 2026, 2:34 AM

0 Comments

No comments yet. Be the first to say something.