Houston Chronicle

Gun bill debate in Florida is long, strident

House panel OKs armed teachers, hiking rifle age to 21

- By Kelli Kennedy, Brendan Farrington and Curt Anderson

PARKLAND, Fla. — Family members of people killed in a South Florida school shooting gave emotional testimony Tuesday during a legislativ­e hearing to discuss passing a bill that would allow for armed teachers and raise the age limit to buy rifles.

Max Schachter, father of 14year-old victim Alex Schachter, who died Feb. 14 at the high school, said the bill the House committee eventually approved doesn’t go far enough — but could have saved his son.

“If we would have had these measures in place, I would not have had to bury my son next to his mother a week and a half ago. I’m standing your for your help. I’m pleading for your help. I’m willing to compromise. Are you?” he asked.

A House committee approved the bill that would raise the minimum age to buy rifles from 18 to 21 and creates a three-day waiting period for all gun purchase. The bill would also create a program that allows teachers who receive law enforcemen­t training and are deputized by the local sheriff’s office to carry concealed weapons in the classroom if also approved by the school district.

Marion Hammer, a lobbyist for the National Rifle Associatio­n and Unified Sportsmen of Florida, told the House Appropriat­ions Committee that she supports hardening schools and keeping guns out of the hands of the mentally ill, but couldn’t support the bill because of the new restrictio­ns on gun ownership.

After the meeting, she said the restrictio­ns wouldn’t have stopped the Parkland shootings.

“Part of what we need to do is make people understand that guns are not the problem. None of the gun control that they have in this bill will stop mass shooters with mental illness. There are laws in place that if they had been followed, that shooter could have been stopped so many times it makes your head spin. So passing more laws dealing with guns as a solution to a problem that exists within the enforcemen­t of laws is just kind of silly.”

The 23-6 vote Tuesday followed more than four hours of emotional discussion, including from parents of some of the 17 killed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Valentine’s Day.

Democratic Rep. Jared Moskowitz, a former Parkland vice mayor, said he didn’t like the bill, but still voted for it. He explained, “It doesn’t go far enough, and now it goes too far in other areas. But the NRA opposes it and I will not vote with the NRA.”

Unlike Monday, when hundreds of sometimes rowdy protesters jammed a Senate meeting to consider a similar bill, Tuesday’s proceeding­s were more orderly. Several speakers spoke in favor of the assault weapons ban, including Parkland resident Amber Hersh.

“Our children lost a friend. Our friend lost a daughter. This is your opportunit­y. The world is watching,” she told the committee.

An amendment to ban assault weapons lost on an 18-11 vote.

Meanwhile, students are scheduled to return to school Wednesday.

Andrew Pollack, the father of 18-year-old victim Meadow Pollack, told legislator­s Tuesday that the entire country is watching.

“I can’t tell you how much pain is running through my body. Every day I feel it. I don’t want anyone to feel the pain that I feel,” he said. “So right now in Florida, we have the chance to stop it. And we have the obligation, because every other state in this country is watching Florida right now, what we're going to do.

“A child should go to school and not worry that some animal is going to walk in with a gun.”

 ?? Rhona Wise / AFP/Getty Images ?? Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., will reopen Wednesday. Parents of some students killed in the massacre there gave emotional testimony Tuesday in Tallahasse­e.
Rhona Wise / AFP/Getty Images Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., will reopen Wednesday. Parents of some students killed in the massacre there gave emotional testimony Tuesday in Tallahasse­e.

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