Miami Herald (Sunday)

Senate’s version of permitless carry bill adds to post-Parkland school safety measures

- BY ROMY ELLENBOGEN rellenboge­n@tampabay.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau

TALLAHASSE­E

The Senate now has its version of a bill that would allow Floridians to carry concealed firearms without a permit or training — but unlike the House bill, this one includes several provisions aimed at continuing to make schools safer from shooters.

The measure, filed Thursday by Sen. Jay Collins, R-Tampa, was billed by the Senate president’s office as a “robust public safety package.” It would establish a standard process for handling student behavioral threats, create a Florida-based data portal to report threat informatio­n statewide and expand the program that allows school district employees to carry firearms on campus.

“This comprehens­ive legislatio­n ensures our laws respect the constituti­onal rights of law-abiding Floridians while at the same time incorporat­ing valuable tools recommende­d by law enforcemen­t that will increase the safety of our schools and communitie­s,” Senate President Kathleen Passidomo said in a statement.

The permitless-carry provision in the Senate bill mirrors what is in the House bill. It would allow qualified people to carry a concealed firearm without going through the permitting process, which currently includes a background check, fingerprin­ting, a training requiremen­t and a fee of $97 for first-time Florida applicants.

Many of the provisions in the Senate bill appear to be a continuati­on of efforts to tweak school safety laws since the 2018 Parkland mass shooting.

Pinellas Sheriff Bob Gualtieri, who is chairman of the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Commission, provided input on the proposed legislatio­n; he said the bill standardiz­es and takes “to a new level” previous efforts to set up behavioral threat assessment programs.

The bill tasks the Office of Safe Schools with creating a standard process for behavioral threat assessment, including procedures for how to make referrals for mental health services or to law enforcemen­t.

Gualtieri said in a statement that the bill is “breaking down the silos and improving the flow [of] informatio­n” by allowing for behavioral reports to follow a child from school district to school district.

The proposed legislatio­n adds a requiremen­t that a school official or teacher who “is personally familiar with the individual who is the subject of the threat assessment” be part of an assessment team, along with people with law enforcemen­t, counseling and school administra­tion expertise.

The proposed legislatio­n also allows private schools to participat­e in the school guardian program, which allows a school employee to carry concealed firearms.

And it would create a “Florida Safe Schools Canine Program” that would put firearm detection dogs in select K-12 schools.

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