The Signal

Taking to the streets

Santa Clarita Valley residents participat­e in national March for Our Lives protests

- By Georgia Rios Signal Staff Writer

Seventeen single white roses were placed on seventeen empty desks for those who lost their lives in the Parkland, Florida shooting.

Pairs of shoes were lined up on the grass, each signifying a school shooting—the reason for the March for our Lives event that took place Saturday morning at Bridgeport Park in Valencia.

Amid the political angst, hundreds of students, families, teachers, survivors and community members from across the Santa Clarita Valley came together to join the masses across the nation in attempt to have safer gun laws and create a safer school environmen­t.

“We are all trying to show the people in the government, and the people in charge, that our lives mean more than what they are right now,” said Ally Sagardia, a senior at Valencia High and one of the organizers. “There should never be a time that we go to school and fear for our lives and that seems like a recurring theme in America now, and we need to stop that.”

Supporting the event was Moms Demand Action, a nonpartisa­n, grassroots organizati­on fighting for common sense gun laws.

“We wanted to make sure that these kids are supported in every way that they can possibly be, and we are making sure that their voices are being heard today, and that they can speak through us if they need,” explained Stacey Killinger, state legislativ­e lead for Moms Demand Action. “All of these kids have really stood up against congress and against the federal government to really show that their lives matter.”

The event was comprised of speeches made from students, teachers, pastors and families, each one expressing their views on the political climate and how their voices need to be heard in order to change the continuati­on of gun violence.

“We cannot let another mass shooting turn into another statistic, those we have lost at such a young are are not just numbers on a pie chart, they are human beings,” said Julianna Lozado, president of Santa Clarita Youth and Government. “Get engaged. Your ideas have a purpose, and will invoke change.”

Some younger members of the community also made their voices heard at the event. Samantha Armitage, a sixthgrade­r at Helmers Elementary, explained what she hoped for in her future.

“I hope that when I’m in high school, I don’t ever have to fear for my life whenever I step onto a school campus,” she said, “and people in congress may have the power and control, but we have the influence and the voices to make a change.”

In addition to the students, political figures in Santa Clarita also made speeches, each explaining their own political agenda and what they hope, will bring voters out to the polls in order to start the change.

Once the speeches were finished, the crowd came together—signs in hand— to march down streets of Valencia, protesting for safer gun laws and for students’ lives, joining the countless marches across America.

“I think it shows that this isn't just a group of students feeling one way,” said Sagardia, “but it’s the whole nation feeling this way, and it's incredible that we can all come together and work on this cause.”

 ?? Georgia Rios/The Signal (See additional photos at signalscv.com) ?? Students, families, faculty, and political leaders came together at March for Our Lives protest for safer gun laws and safer schools on Saturday.
Georgia Rios/The Signal (See additional photos at signalscv.com) Students, families, faculty, and political leaders came together at March for Our Lives protest for safer gun laws and safer schools on Saturday.
 ?? Geogia Rios/The Signal (See additional photos at signalscv.com) ?? (Left) Santa Clarita Valley youth hold up signs during a demonstrat­ion in connection with the March for Our Lives protest that took place nationwide.
Geogia Rios/The Signal (See additional photos at signalscv.com) (Left) Santa Clarita Valley youth hold up signs during a demonstrat­ion in connection with the March for Our Lives protest that took place nationwide.
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 ??  ?? (Below) A woman holds up a sign that reads “Books Not Bullets!” during a demonstrat­ion that took place in the Santa Clarita Valley over the weekend.
(Below) A woman holds up a sign that reads “Books Not Bullets!” during a demonstrat­ion that took place in the Santa Clarita Valley over the weekend.
 ?? Geogia Rios/The Signal ?? (Left) Students, families, faculty, and political leaders came together at March for Our Lives protest for safer gun laws and safer schools on Saturday. (Above) A woman holds a poster with photos of the victims of the Parkland, Florida shooting during...
Geogia Rios/The Signal (Left) Students, families, faculty, and political leaders came together at March for Our Lives protest for safer gun laws and safer schools on Saturday. (Above) A woman holds a poster with photos of the victims of the Parkland, Florida shooting during...
 ?? Courtesy photos ?? (Above) Lines of empty desks sit on the grass with white flowers on top to symbolize the lives lost in the Parkland, Florida shooting that happened early March. (Below) Participan­ts in the March for Our Lives protest talk during the demonstrat­ion that...
Courtesy photos (Above) Lines of empty desks sit on the grass with white flowers on top to symbolize the lives lost in the Parkland, Florida shooting that happened early March. (Below) Participan­ts in the March for Our Lives protest talk during the demonstrat­ion that...
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