Chattanooga Times Free Press

Florida students take protest to state capital

- BY TERRY SPENCER, CURT ANDERSON AND BRENDAN FARRINGTON

PARKLAND, Fla. — Students who survived the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School began a 400-mile journey to Florida’s capital Tuesday to urge lawmakers to prevent a repeat of the massacre that killed 17 students and faculty last week.

Three buses carrying 100 students set out from Coral Springs for Tallahasse­e after they were swarmed by dozens of reporters and cameras. The students, many wearing burgundy T-shirts in their school colors, carried sleeping bags,

pillows and luggage and hugged their parents as they departed.

Alfonso Calderon, a 16-year-old junior, said he hopes the trip begins a conversati­on between the Legislatur­e, Gov. Rick Scott and the students over commonsens­e laws on guns.

“America is a gun society. That is what made [suspect] Nikolas Cruz seem normal. It is not normal for someone to have a stockpile of weapons in their room when they are mentally ill,” Calderon said.

The students plan to hold a rally today to put pressure on the state’s Republican-controlled Legislatur­e to consider a package of gun-control laws, something some GOP lawmakers said Monday they would consider.

“I really think they are going to hear us out,” said Chris Grady, a 19-year-old senior who is going on the trip.

The Feb. 14 attack seemed to overcome the resistance of some in the state’s leadership, which has rebuffed gun restrictio­ns since Republican­s took control of both the governor’s office and the Legislatur­e in 1999. However, there is still strong resistance by many in the party to any gun-control measures, leaving the fate of new restrictio­ns unclear.

Students also have vowed to exert pressure on Congress.

Sen. Bill Galvano, a Republican and the incoming Florida Senate president, said the state Senate was preparing a package that would include raising the age to purchase any firearm to 21, creating a waiting period for purchasing any type of firearm, banning bump stocks that can allow semi-automatic guns to spray bullets quickly and creating gun-violence restrainin­g orders.

The Parkland students planned to meet today with top legislativ­e leaders, including Senate President Joe Negron and House Speaker Richard Corcoran.

But their push to restrict guns might be a difficult task. Florida has a reputation for expanding — not restrictin­g — gun rights. Negron sponsored a 2011 bill that Republican Gov. Rick Scott signed into law that banned cities and counties from regulating gun and ammunition sales.

Authoritie­s said suspect Cruz, 19, had a string of run-ins with school authoritie­s that ended with his expulsion. Police also were repeatedly called to his house throughout his childhood. Cruz’s lawyers said there were many warning signs he was mentally unstable and potentiall­y violent. Yet he legally purchased a semi-automatic rifle.

The Senate also is considerin­g boosting spending on mental health programs for schools and giving law-enforcemen­t greater power to involuntar­ily hold someone considered a danger to themselves. State House leaders and the governor also are considerin­g possible changes to firearms rules but have not given any details.

Still, some Republican­s questioned whether additional gun restrictio­ns are the answer.

“I really don’t want to see this politicize­d into a gun debate,” said Republican Sen. Dennis Baxley.

Referring to gun-control advocates, he said: “Sometimes I wish they were right, that this would fix it, but it won’t … We have a terrible problem with obesity, but we’re not banning forks and spoons.”

Democrats believe raising the age limit and creating a waiting period to buy rifles is not enough.

“That’s unacceptab­le. That’s a joke,” said Democratic Sen. Gary Farmer of Broward County. “I don’t see that as a restrictio­n. It never should have been that an 18-year-old could buy an assault weapon. No Floridians should be able to buy an assault weapon.”

 ?? THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Julia Salomone, 18, front row left, Lindsey Salomone, 15, front row right, Jose Iglesias, 17, second row left, and Isabelle Robinson, 17, second row right, and other student survivors from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, talk on their bus Tuesday...
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Julia Salomone, 18, front row left, Lindsey Salomone, 15, front row right, Jose Iglesias, 17, second row left, and Isabelle Robinson, 17, second row right, and other student survivors from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, talk on their bus Tuesday...

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