Putting an armed guard in every Minnesota school would require the hiring of hundreds of police or security guards and could cost in the neighborhood of $138 million.
"The cost would be just astronomical," said Scott Croonquist, executive director of the Association of Metropolitan School Districts, who senses that opposition to the NRA's proposal from his 43 Twin Cities area districts goes beyond the cost factor.
"They don't feel the answer would be to bring more guns into the schools," he said.
A few districts already station armed police in schools. But those officers spend little of their time standing in the schoolhouse door to block intruders.
That's a very small part of it," said Lt. Andy Smith, head of the Minneapolis juvenile unit. "It's such a much more complex job than being armed security."
Minneapolis schools spend close to $900,000 annually to station 16 officers in schools, along with the cost of a supervisor and school patrol officer. That's just part of the tab. The Police Department underwrites the cost of cars, radios and summer salaries. St. Paul has a similar but smaller program.
School groups contacted on Monday said they lack hard information about the number of schools currently with armed protection. It's more common in the metro area and in secondary schools, said Gary Amoroso, executive director of the Minnesota Association of School Administrators. He said he'd rather see conversations on addressing gun control and mental health issues.
For officer Mike Kirchen at Lucy Laney at Cleveland Park Community School, his day is likely to start with a high five or fist bump with North Side students as they stream off the bus. It's part of what he sees as his main job -- developing a relationship with the kindergarten through eighth-grade students.