The Province

Emotional return for Florida students

Hundreds of police officers guard high schoolers as they ‘ease back’ into academic routines

- KELLI KENNEDY, TERRY SPENCER AND JOSH REPLOGLE

PARKLAND, Fla. — Students and teachers hugged and cried Wednesday as they returned under heavy police guard to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High for the first time since a teenager with an assault rifle killed 17 people and thrust the huge Florida school into the centre of a renewed national gun debate.

The half-day began with fourth period so that the nearly 3,300 students could first be with the people they were with during the shooting two weeks ago.

“In the beginning, everyone was super serious, but then everyone cheered up and it started being the same vibes we had before the shooting. People started laughing and joking around,” said Kyle Kashuv, a junior who said he hugged every single teacher.

On the way in, teens were guarded by hundreds of police officers. The police were accompanie­d by comfort animals, including dogs, horses and a donkey. One of the horses had “eagle pride” painted on its side. A nearby woman held a sign offering “free kisses.”

After school dismissed, members of the Guardian Angels wearing their trademark red berets lined the streets at a crosswalk.

Kashuv said he was amazed by the outpouring of support from the community, including the police presence, the animals and many well-wishers. There were letters from all over the world and “banners on every single wall,” he said.

Some of the officers carried military-style rifles, and Superinten­dent Robert Runcie said the police presence would continue for the remainder of the school year. The heavy arms rattled some students.

The National Rifle Associatio­n “wants more people just like this, with that exact firearm, to scare more people and sell more guns,” said David Hogg, who has become a leading voice in the student movement to restrict assault weapons.

About 150 grief counsellor­s were on campus “to provide a lot of love, a lot of understand­ing” and to help students “ease back” into their school routines, Runcie said.

The freshman building where the Feb. 14 massacre took place remained cordoned off.

Students were told to leave their backpacks at home. Principal Ty Thomas tweeted that the school’s focus would be on “emotional readiness and comfort, not curriculum.”

In each classroom, coloured pencils, colouring books, stress balls and toys were available to help students cope.

“It’s not how you go down. It’s how you get back up,” said Casey Sherman, a 17-year-old junior.

Many students said the debate over new gun laws helped them process the traumatic event and prepared them to return.

As classes resumed, Dick’s Sporting Goods, a major U.S. retailer, announced that it would immediatel­y halt sales of assault-style rifles and high-capacity magazines at all of its stores and ban the sale of all guns to anyone under 21. The company’s CEO took on the NRA by demanding tougher gun laws.

In making the move, Dick’s may be catching up to its own customer base.

Young people — the target demographi­c for sporting gear — have become the new face of the gun-control movement.

“We have tremendous respect and admiration for the students organizing and making their voices heard regarding gun violence in schools and elsewhere in our country,” the company stated. “We have heard you. The nation has heard you.”

 ?? — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? Police greet students returning to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Wednesday in Parkland, Fla.
— THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Police greet students returning to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School on Wednesday in Parkland, Fla.

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