The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

Schools prepared for 2nd national walkout

Local activities to be smaller than those last month.

- By Marlon A. Walker marlon.walker@ajc.com

At Lakeside High School this morning, student activities for a national walkout will center around ways young people can continue having their voices heard, from registerin­g to vote to engaging in conversati­ons on continued activism.

The purpose of last month’s walkout was to remember the 17 students and staff members killed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland,

Fla., when a former student opened fire in the school. This event — 19 years to the day after two students waged a war inside Columbine High School in Littleton, Colo., that left 15 dead — is to continue the momentum and show students where they can use their voices.

“All of this is about stu- dents,” said Lakeside High senior Sawyer Wolf, “and I think that’s why people finally are starting to ... feel

they have a place in the con- versation.”

Projected participat­ion across metro Atlanta for the second school walkout in

about five weeks appears to fall sharply from the protest on March 14, where more than 100,000 students walked out of class to remem- ber the Florida shooting victims, among other activities.

Tucker H igh School also has a full day’s events planned, organizers said. The activities in DeKalb were planned with guidance from school administra­tions, and supported by district leadership.

“Our top priority remains supporting the academic and social emotional needs of our students while maintainin­g a safe and orderly environmen­t for all students and staff,” the district said in a statement.

Students who led March 14 walkouts at several Cobb County high schools said there aren’t organized plans to repeat the demonstra-

tions today, partly due to repercussi­ons students faced for participat­ing in the first walkout. Some Cobb students have been working to organize town halls to dis

cuss gun control. At Pope High School, students plan to

meet before school to hold a memorial for victims of the Columbine shooting.

Cobb County School District penalized participan­ts of last month’s walkout more harshly than most metro Atlanta school systems. Students who walked out received a one-day in-school suspension.

Many area districts had nothing planned to commemorat­e the Columbine anniversar­y.

At Atlanta Public Schools, Inman Middle School students who organized a walk- out last month announced on social media that they would not be walking out today. Instead, they urged students to wear orange —

the color associated with gun-violence activism.

Some students plan to rally outside the Georgia State Capitol before attending a town hall to discuss gun violence and school safety at 7 p.m. at First Congregati­onal Church, 105 Courtland St. NE. The town hall is hosted by Georgia Students for Change.

 ?? HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM ?? Thousands march to Liberty Plaza during the March For Our Lives rally in downtown Atlanta last month.
HYOSUB SHIN / HSHIN@AJC.COM Thousands march to Liberty Plaza during the March For Our Lives rally in downtown Atlanta last month.

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