Miami Herald

In bid to curb school shootings, Florida has adopted 3 measures; more are on the way

- BY KIRBY WILSON kwilson@tampabay.com Herald/Times Tallahasse­e Bureau Tampa Bay Times Staff Writer Natalie Weber contribute­d to this report.

TALLAHASSE­E

Florida has been through this.

After the 2018 school shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida lawmakers took steps to tweak the state’s mentalheal­th system. They added hundreds of millions in funding for school-safety officers. A historic 2018 bill included several gun-control measures that passed with Republican support.

Still, as Floridians join other Americans in mourning the deaths of the 21 killed in a school shooting this week in Uvalde, Texas, some wonder if more could or should be done to improve school safety.

Democratic state Rep. Christine Hunschofsk­y was mayor of Parkland when a school shooter took the lives of 17 people there, and then worked closely with Republican leaders on school-safety measures. She understand­s parents’ worries about how safe their children are in school.

“That’s tough, because I get it,” she said. “I think there has been work done to make the schools safer. I think it’s important that all communitie­s and all parents and everyone get involved and be vigilant.

... It’s about all of us looking out for each other in this process.”

It’s not clear what response Florida lawmakers could have to the Texas shooting.

But leaders such as Hunschofsk­y say there’s more the state could do. Unmet demand for mental-health services in schools remains an issue. Every year, Democrats file bills to further restrict the sale of certain types of guns. And some of the original measures passed by the Legislatur­e could be expanded.

Here are three school safety measures that state lawmakers have passed, and three more that proponents have suggested but lawmakers haven’t taken up.

3 THINGS THE FLORIDA LEGISLATUR­E HAS DONE

School “guardians”: The landmark Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Act allowed school profession­als to volunteer as armed personnel. Some districts hired staff to serve as “guardians.” Others allowed staff to serve a dual role as a “guardian” along with their other responsibi­lities, although that bill excluded many teachers from being guardians.

Lawmakers also set aside $97.5 million in recurring funding for more school officers and created the Office of Safe Schools under the Department of Education in 2018. They mandated more active-shooter drills and many school districts implemente­d “school hardening” — with some even raising local taxes to pay for improvemen­ts such as security cameras or door locks.

The next year, with the passage of SB 7030, the Legislatur­e allowed districts to opt to consider all teachers for the guardian program. That measure also enacted many recommenda­tions from the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Commission, which is led by Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri.

Democrats fiercely resisted the bill expanding access to concealed weapons for some teachers.

2. Gun control: In 2018, the Republican-led Legislatur­e banned socalled bump stocks, which allow a user to modify a semi-automatic weapon to reload and fire at close to the rate of an automatic weapon.

Gun sales for most Floridians younger than 21 were also banned. (That legislatio­n has been the subject of a long-running legal battle.) People in mental institutio­ns were barred from owning firearms, and the state imposed a three-day waiting period on gun purchases. However, the Legislatur­e declined to ban assault weapons despite calls from some of the shooting victims.

This year, Gov. Ron DeSantis has said he would support a policy to loosen gun restrictio­ns in one area, by allowing people to publicly carry firearms even if they have not previously taken a training course or received a permit.

3. Florida’s red-flag law: A major component of 2018’s legislatio­n allowed law enforcemen­t to confiscate guns from people deemed to be a threat to themselves or others.

The red-flag law had been used more than 3,500 times as of early 2020, according to The Associated Press.

3 THINGS THE LEGISLATUR­E HAS LEFT ON THE TABLE

1. Expand red-flag law: Under current law, only law enforcemen­t can initiate weapon-confiscati­on proceeding­s. Some Democrats would like to see that policy expanded to allow family members to initiate that process.

“In many cases families see the risk before law enforcemen­t does,” Rep. Anna Eskamani, D-Orlando, wrote in a text message Wednesday.

2. Create greater access to mental-health services in schools: Hunschofsk­y noted there is a dearth of psychologi­sts in schools.

The Parkland Democrat said there aren’t enough school psychologi­sts in the state. But she said a bill, HB 899, which she sponsored in 2022, might make some headway by mandating that each school district staff a mental-health coordinato­r to work with the Office of Safe Schools.

DeSantis signed that measure into law last week.

3. More police oversight at schools: Gualtieri, the chairperso­n of the school-safety commission, said school shootings are impossible to stop.

“You’re never going to prevent it,” he said. “But what you can do is that you put some speed bumps in the way, you put obstacles in the way and you can try and identify as quickly as possible people that are on what’s called a pathway to violence and derail them from that pathway.”

The Pinellas sheriff said he would like to see school staff do more consistent behavioral threat assessment­s to suss out potential dangers. He said he would like those assessment­s to be put into one statewide database.

Rep. Fred Hawkins,

R-St. Cloud, who sponsored the 2022 schoolsafe­ty bill (HB 1421), also hopes to bring more uniformity to safety measures. DeSantis is expected to sign it in the coming days.

“I think we need to do a school-safety bill every year,” Hawkins said. “Because things change.”

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