The Prince George Citizen

School mourns Toronto shooting victim

- Nicole THOMPSON Citizen news service

TORONTO — High school students and teachers interrupte­d their summer vacations on Tuesday to mourn a teen killed in a shooting spree in Toronto’s Greektown over the weekend, rememberin­g her as a kind individual and a natural caregiver.

Reese Fallon had graduated from Malvern Collegiate Institute just last month and was out on a stretch of the city’s Danforth Avenue on Sunday night when she was shot by a man who fired at restaurant­s, patios and pedestrian­s.

Fallon and a 10-year-old girl, who hasn’t been publicly identified at her family’s request, were killed and 13 others were injured. The gunman was found dead in the area.

On Tuesday, dozens of Fallon’s classmates gathered at her high school to remember the 18-year-old, who was preparing to study nursing at Hamilton’s McMaster University in the fall.

“This stuff happens all over the world every day, but you never really feel it till it’s close to you,” said 17-year-old Max Flath, who wasn’t close to Fallon but saw her at school every day. “She was a great person.”

Bouquets of flowers, handwritte­n notes and candles had been placed outside the school, underneath the building’s Canadian flag, which flew at half-mast.

Inside the building, five social workers This undated photo provided by the Fallon family shows Reese Fallon. Fallon, 18, and a 10-yearold girl were killed in a shooting on Sunday. and 15 therapy dogs were in place to provide support to those who needed it.

The Toronto District School Board said it decided to open the school to mourners after seeing the outpouring of emotion following Fallon’s death. A board spokeswoma­n said about 100 students showed up to the school on Tuesday.

“We wanted to create a safe space within the school today so people could be together,” said Shari Schwartz-Maltz. “It’s also just a place for everybody to come together.”

Fallon’s teachers were also at the school paying tribute to their student.

“Her plan was to become a mental health nurse,” said Anthony Parise, Fallon’s English teacher.

“Knowing what I know of Reese, she would have been an exceptiona­l nurse, because she was a natural caregiver.”

Another teacher, Mark Steel, and his wife, Julie, set up an online fundraisin­g campaign to raise money for a scholarshi­p in Fallon’s name. By Tuesday afternoon, it had raised four times its initial goal of $5,000.

“Our idea was that we’d give the scholarshi­p out annually to a Malvern Collegiate graduate who was going into a nursing program, because Reese was so excited and so proud to do that,” Julie Steel said, biting back tears. “She would have been an incredible nurse.”

Fallon’s family has said it is devastated by the teen’s death and has asked for privacy.

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