Albuquerque Journal

Florida Senate OKs gun bill, 20-18

Armed teachers, limits on gun sales approved

- ASSOCIATED PRESS

TALLAHASSE­E, Fla. — In response to a deadly Florida school shooting last month, the state’s Senate narrowly passed a bill Monday that would create new restrictio­ns on rifle sales and allow some teachers to carry guns in schools.

The 20-18 vote came after three hours of often emotional debate. Support and opposition crossed party lines, and it was clear many of those who voted for the bill weren’t entirely happy with it.

“Do I think this bill goes far enough? No! No, I don’t!” said Democratic Sen. Lauren Book, who tearfully described visiting Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School after 17 people were fatally shot on Valentine’s Day.

She also would have liked a ban on assault-style rifles, as did many of the students who traveled to the state Capitol to call on lawmakers to go even further with gun control measures. But Book said she couldn’t let the legislativ­e session end Friday without doing something.

“My community was rocked. My schoolchil­dren were murdered in their classrooms. I cannot live with a choice to put party politics above an opportunit­y to get something done that inches us closer to the place I believe we should be as a state,” she said. “This is the first step in saying never again.”

Earlier Monday, families of the 17 Florida high school massacre victims called on the state’s Legislatur­e to pass a bill they believe will improve school security.

Reading a statement outside Stoneman Douglas High School in Broward County, Ryan Petty implored legislator­s to pass Gov. Rick Scott’s proposal to add armed security guards, keep guns away from the mentally ill and improve mental health programs for at-risk teens. Scott also opposes arming teachers.

“We must be the last families to lose loved ones in a mass shooting at a school. This time must be different and we demand action,” said Petty, reading from the group statement.

Petty’s 14-year-old daughter, Alaina, was killed in the Feb. 14 shooting, along with 13 schoolmate­s and three staff members.

Republican­s and Democrats alike said there were parts of the bill they didn’t like. Democrats didn’t like the idea of letting teachers carry guns, even though the bill was amended to somewhat curtail that proposed program. And many pro-gun rights Republican­s didn’t like the idea of raising the minimum age to buy rifles from 18 to 21 and to create a waiting period on sales of the weapons.

The Senate amended its bill to limit which teachers could volunteer to go through law enforcemen­t training and carry guns in schools. Any teacher who works exclusivel­y in a classroom would not be eligible for the program, but teachers who perform other duties, such as serving as a coach, and other school employees could still participat­e. Other exceptions would be made for teachers who are current or former law enforcemen­t officers, members of the military or who teach in a Junior Reserve Officer’s Training Corps program.

Republican Sen. Bill Galvano, who took the lead on the bill, said he recognized there was bipartisan opposition to it but said that was a good thing.

“You know what that means in my experience? That we’ve gotten somewhere,” he said. “We’re hitting nerves. We’re going into areas that may not be our comfort zone.”

And he said the bill will make a difference. In addition to the gun restrictio­ns and arming some school personnel, it would create new mental health programs for schools, improve communicat­ion between schools, law enforcemen­t and state agencies, create a task force to look at mistakes made during mass shootings nationally and then make recommenda­tions on how to continue to improve law, and establish an anonymous tip line where students and others can report threats to schools.

The bill now goes to the House, which has a similar bill still waiting for considerat­ion by the full chamber. The annual 60-day session is scheduled to end Friday.

 ?? JOSE A. IGLESIAS/EL NUEVO HERALD ?? Fred Guttenberg holds a picture of his slain daughter, Jaime, as he listens to questions from the media during a press conference Monday in front of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla.
JOSE A. IGLESIAS/EL NUEVO HERALD Fred Guttenberg holds a picture of his slain daughter, Jaime, as he listens to questions from the media during a press conference Monday in front of Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla.

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