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Something needs to change about the security curriculum
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I have seen on quite a few ocassions where security causes incidents simply because they do not know their local/state laws. Either they need to add a baseline of important laws security should know for their area and/or have it regulated where they need to take a certain number of continuing credit hours every year with a portion of that pertaining to laws. If you're gonna stop someone and call the police on them at least know what you're doing, for example I've seen security stop people asking for an carry permit in a constitutional carry state....which mean they can carry without a permit , or kicking people off a property for having a service animal because the property has a policy that says "no pets allowed" (service animals are not pets but trained medical equipment and used for medical purposes). I know places like allied universal do offer their own in house continuing education but at least in my experience it's not enforced. Anybody can chime in maybe give their opinion on this topic, if your state does have a annual continuing education program for security what do they ask for?

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3 years ago