The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

March for Our Lives to attract thousands

‘No matter what the weather does, we will march,’ spokesman says.

- By Vanessa McCray vanessa.mccray@ajc.com Arlinda Smith Broady abroady@ajc.com

Thousands of Georgians will fill the streets of Atlanta, Washington, D.C., and cities across the nation Saturday to protest gun violence and call for tighter gun controls.

The March for Our Lives events are among more than 820 demonstrat­ions worldwide. They are the culminatio­n of protests that began in Parkland, Florida, after the Feb. 14 mass school shooting, which sparked walkouts from classrooms across metro Atlanta and the nation one month later.

The Atlanta program begins at 11 a.m. at the National Center for Civil and Human Rights. Speakers include Congressma­n John Lewis; Mary-Pat Hector, who at 19 ran for a city council office in Stonecrest; and survivors of the Florida school shooting, Jack and Alec Zaslav.

The march to Liberty Plaza, where there will be more speakers, starts at noon. Depending upon the size of the crowd, the march itself could take several hours. Atlanta Police are expecting 7,500 based on social media interest but planning for more.

Streets along the march route will be closed from about 10 a.m. to 4 p.m., said Atlanta police Deputy Chief Scott Kreher.

Downtown already will be bustling because of a dental conference and an NCAA basketball tournament game, which will draw thousands more.

Organizers have put plans in place for nearly every contingenc­y.

Major partners of the march are the nonprofits Georgia Alliance for Social Justice and Every-

town for Gun Safety. Among the hundreds of marches, Everytown picked Atlanta to invest additional resources. It is paying for stages, TV monitors, electrical generators, sound systems, portable toilets and water stations.

The city of Atlanta is providing police, fire and EMTs as well as sanitation workers. The Department of Homeland Security is also involved and may have staff members at the event.

Besides helping the young organizers plan and promote the march, the Alliance provided safety vests and whistles for peace marshals and raised money through T-shirt sales.

Organizers have reached out to cellphone service providers, and AT&T said it will have additional hotspots that should accommodat­e increased phone usage.

Smaller groups from metro Atlanta will trek about 600 miles to Washington to join in the national march.

Roswell attorney Brad Kaplan created a $14,000 fund to help students, parents and teachers cover gas and lodging. He estimated that the stipends would help several dozen demonstrat­ors travel to Washington.

About 10 minority students plus chaperones will go to Washington with the Athens Anti-Discrimina­tion Movement. It will be the first time some of the teens have left Georgia.

“I think this will be a life-changing experience for them,” said the nonprofit’s co-founder, Mokah-Jasmine Johnson.

University of Georgia students and community members remaining in Athens will rally from 1 to 3 p.m. Saturday at the Arch.

Atlanta organizers encourage attendees to bring rain ponchos.

“No matter what the weat h er does, we will march,” said spokesman Ethan Asher. The Centennial High School sophomore from Roswell said the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School hit home because he had friends close to many victims.

“It wasn’t something that happened in a remote place,” he said. “In my life- time school shootings have become too common. This isn’t political in the sense that it’s one party against another. We just want the violence to stop. We just want common-sense gun legislatio­n.”

 ?? CURTIS COMPTON/CCOMPTON@AJC.COM ?? Jennia Taylor, a student at Spelman College, helps make signs and finalize plans for the March for Our Lives protest at the Central Presbyteri­an Church on Wednesday in Atlanta. Mark Landler, Julie Hirschfeld Davis and Peter Baker
CURTIS COMPTON/CCOMPTON@AJC.COM Jennia Taylor, a student at Spelman College, helps make signs and finalize plans for the March for Our Lives protest at the Central Presbyteri­an Church on Wednesday in Atlanta. Mark Landler, Julie Hirschfeld Davis and Peter Baker
 ?? STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL TO THE AJC ?? Participan­ts prepare for Saturday’s march by making protest posters at the Rook and Pawn in Athens on Sunday.
STEVE SCHAEFER / SPECIAL TO THE AJC Participan­ts prepare for Saturday’s march by making protest posters at the Rook and Pawn in Athens on Sunday.

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