Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

School safety

Gov. Walker signs $100 million school safety plan.

- Patrick Marley, Chris Mueller and Jason Stein Patrick Marley and Jason Stein reported for this story in Madison and Chris Mueller in Kaukauna.

KAUKAUNA – In the wake of shootings around the country, Gov. Scott Walker on Monday signed a $100 million plan that would tighten school security but not put new limits on guns.

The debate over gun control has hit a high pitch in recent days as Democrats and Republican­s trade attacks, and Sen. Kathleen Vinehout took criticism from a fellow Democratic candidate for governor over her opposition to some gun control measures.

The legislatio­n signed by Walker provides schools with grants for building improvemen­ts and staffing training under the oversight of Walker’s fellow Republican, Attorney General Brad Schimel.

Walker unveiled the legislatio­n after a gunman with a semiautoma­tic rifle last month killed 17 at a high school in Parkland, Fla. The governor signed the measure two days after marchers nationally — including thousands in Madison and Milwaukee — demonstrat­ed to demand gun control, but Walker argued that gun violence wasn’t the right focus.

“We’re not just focusing on the threat from firearms,” he said. “We’re making sure that any threat to our schools is one that can be addressed by these grants.”

The legislatio­n, Assembly Bill 843, moved swiftly through the Republican­controlled Legislatur­e with bipartisan support. Last week, the Senate approved it 28-4 and the Assembly 78-8.

Although many of them voted for it, Democrats said Republican­s were missing the point and needed to do more to stop school violence.

“Where is the bill that will keep a semiautoma­tic weapon out of the hands of an 18-year old? Where is the one thing most gun owners agree that they can get behind, universal background checks? This rushed response falls short,” Sen. LaTonya Johnson (DMilwaukee) said after voting for the measure.

The Assembly passed separate legislatio­n last week that would add some additional steps to current background checks for the purchases of rifles and shotguns. But Senate Majority Leader Scott Fitzgerald (R-Juneau) has said his house is unlikely to take that legislatio­n up. On WKOW-TV Sunday, two Democratic candidates for governor disagreed over how far their party should go in pushing gun control.

Former state Rep. Kelda Roys of Madison said Democrats should push for banning high-capacity magazines, requiring background checks for all gun sales and bringing back the state’s former 48-hour waiting period for handgun purchases.

“We do need to win (elections) statewide, but we’re not going to do it by compromisi­ng the safety of our children and compromisi­ng our values,” Roys said. “Enough is enough.”

Vinehout, the state senator, said Democrats can’t adopt a blanket opposition to firearms if they want to win in rural areas.

Vinehout has opposed banning semiautoma­tic assault-style rifles because some of those rifles are used for hunting and also questioned whether a universal background check law would make it too hard for individual­s to sell used guns. Vinehout took a $500 contributi­on from the National Rifle Associatio­n in her last campaign that she said was unsolicite­d.

“We have to have a discussion about policies related to guns and abortion that work statewide because continuing to argue it among ourselves doesn’t do anything for Democrats,” Vinehout said.

State Republican Party spokesman Alec Zimmerman said that with the schools plan Walker had delivered “bipartisan reforms” while Democrats bickered.

“His Democrat opponents are taking their attacks on each other to new levels to score political points and appease their far-left base,” Zimmerman said.

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