In the last week or so, lawmakers on both sides of the aisle have clashed over what they'd like to see in
the gun safety proposals.
Not exact matches
Republicans and Democrats Agree Arming Teachers don't make schools safer TALLAHASSEE — Less than two weeks after the Parkland shooting, Florida Republicans are playing politics with public
safety and embracing one of Donald Trump's most widely derided
proposals to reduce
gun violence.
Cuomo trained his crosshairs on seven New York Republican House members over the
gun issue as Trump rolled out a school -
safety plan long on NRA ideas like arming teachers and short on Democratic - backed
proposals like universal background checks.
The
proposal to raise the minimum age for buying
guns from 18 to 21 was not part of a modest set of Trump administration school
safety plans announced on Sunday and which were closely aligned with National Rifle Association (NRA) positions.
The Valentine's Day shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School by a gunman armed with an AR - 15 style assault rifle has reignited national debate over
gun laws and school
safety, including
proposals by President Donald Trump and others to designate more people — including trained teachers — to carry arms on school grounds.
You can not undo what has been done, but you can accomplish something very powerful and positive by creating a capital campaign that would help to fund some of the
proposals put forward by the Lower Hudson Council of School Superintendents to address
gun violence and school
safety, as reported in your 12/31/12 edition.
Cornell has called upon Janet Hasson, president and publisher and CynDee Royle, editor and vice-president of News to initiate a capital campaign, sponsored by the paper, that would help to fund some of the
proposals put forward by the Lower Hudson Council of School Superintendents to address
gun violence and school
safety, including needed mental health and social services and school resource officers.
ALBANY — The Republican - led state Senate on Monday approved bills intended to improve school
safety in the wake of the latest school shooting massacre, but only after voting down a number of Democratic
gun - control
proposals and trading insults.
Dubbed the «Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public
Safety Act,» or SB 7026, the sweeping
proposal provides for stricter
gun control laws, including a three - day waiting period to buy any firearm, and a new age limit — 21 (up from 18)-- for firearms purchases, along with an all - out ban on bump stocks.
The bills and
proposals for school
safety come as Democratic lawmakers have called for traditional
gun control measures after the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.
In a pre-emptive move against a school
safety proposal from the National Rifle Association that is expected to include a call for more people trained and approved to carry
guns at schools, a coalition of civil rights groups unveiled its own
safety plan Thursday.
(Calif.) The flurry of legislative
proposals that often follows a school shooting most often take aim at
gun restrictions or shoring up mental health services.But there are other steps that can be taken to improve campus security — among them, building strategically - designed school facilities or adding
safety upgrades to the existing ones.
The Valentine's Day shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School has reignited national debate over
gun laws and school
safety, including
proposals by President Donald Trump and others to designate more people — including trained teachers — to carry arms on school grounds.
As a painful debate about school
safety rages in the U.S., President Donald Trump's
proposal to put more
guns in schools carries echoes of the questions being asked in the northeast Nigeria.