The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Kansas might make schools liable for not arming staff

- By Mitchell Willetts

TOPEKA, KAN. — Kansas schools that refuse to allow teachers to carry guns could be held legally responsibl­e in the event of a tragedy under a proposal drafted after last month’s mass shooting at a Florida high school.

Opponents of the measure expressed concern it could effectivel­y mandate arming teachers rather than simply allowing it.

“It would certainly open the door for that conversati­on,” said Democratic Rep. Brett Parker, an Overland Park school teacher. “The further we go down this rabbit hole, the more chance there is for even more obnoxious legislatio­n moving forward.”

Even if that provision is stripped, as some advocates suggested during the hearing, the bill would prohibit insurers from denying coverage to a school because it lets its teachers or staff members carry weapons.

At least nine other states have provisions in place giving teachers the option of carrying guns in schools, but the Kansas plan seems to go further than most other laws in place or under considerat­ion.

The proposal is separate from one embraced by Republican leaders in the House that focuses on improving school infrastruc­ture instead of arming staff. That measure, which appears to have broader support, won first-round approval on Tuesday.

Rep. Blake Carpenter, a Republican who helped write the legislatio­n that holds schools liable, said he is confident armed and trained teachers will save lives. Police could be minutes away, and in smaller districts where modest funding means school-resource officers aren’t hired, the bill would allow for “next best thing,” he told the committee.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States