Today is the one-year anniversary of the massacre at the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. It should never be forgotten. Nor should the massacre of children and staff at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, CT. Nor the massacre at Columbine High School in Colorado. So many more. So many tragedies. So little action in response. So many excuses by politicians who are in a position to limit access to deadly weapons. There will be more tragedies, more empty “thoughts and prayers” until we as a society get serious about establishing effective measures to keep deadly weapons out of the hands of people who have not been carefully screened and trained. Please. No more.
Teachers Union Leaders on the Anniversary of Parkland Shooting |
| WASHINGTON—Leaders of the American Federation of Teachers, the National Education Association, the Florida Education Association and the Broward Teachers Union on the anniversary of the shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla.:
AFT President Randi Weingarten: “Over the past year, I’ve gotten to know so many of the educators, students and parents of the Stoneman Douglas community. We’ve wept, we’ve mourned, we’ve marched, we’ve lobbied, and we’ve made it clear that we will never stop fighting for the proven interventions that can make our schools safe from gun violence. Today we honor the 17 innocent children and educators murdered last year on Feb. 14—children whose hopes and dreams were snuffed out, and educators who sacrificed their lives shielding their students from bullets. I visited Stoneman Douglas last week, along with AFT leaders from across the country, to honor the students and educators there. The trauma is still real, and the healing is far from over. But they remain ‘MSD Strong,’ and all their unions—the AFT, the NEA, their local affiliates in Broward and statewide affiliates in Florida—remain committed to providing the support the Stoneman Douglas community needs.
“Today is also a day to remember, to mourn those who died and to show gratitude to the students, educators and parents who summoned the courage to fight this righteous fight to end the epidemic of gun violence in our country. They’ve done what many of us were unable to do: expose how so many in power have prioritized the interests of the National Rifle Association and gun manufacturers over the safety of children, educators and schools. We stand with them today and every day to ensure our schools are safe sanctuaries, not armed fortresses. We do it for the innocent children and educators lost on Feb. 14. We do it for the countless lives lost to gun violence over the past year. We do it for every student and every educator in a classroom right now who just wants to feel safe and loved in their school. And we will never give up.”
NEA President Lily Eskelsen Garcia: “While many high schoolers exchange valentines on Feb. 14, the students in Parkland, Fla., will relive the trauma of running for cover and sheltering under desks as they tried to save themselves and their friends from the onslaught of gunfire one year ago. On that day, 17 students and educators lost their lives, making it the deadliest mass shooting at a high school in U.S. history.
“Sadly, the Parkland community is not alone in facing this kind of devastating loss. Thoughts and prayers simply aren’t enough to keep our students and educators safe. Politicians can no longer afford to sit on the sidelines, and the National Education Association applauds how members of the U.S. House of Representatives have begun to move legislation that actually addresses the scourge of gun violence plaguing our communities. The lives that have been lost to gun violence cannot be in vain. The time is now to create policies that make a difference and save lives.”
FEA President Fedrick Ingram: “The fight for safe, welcoming public schools in Florida is forever shaped by what happened in Parkland last year. Since then, we have come together to rebuild, and to make sure students and teachers in Florida have the tools they need to build safe sanctuaries where kids can learn free from fear of gun violence and teachers can teach math, science and the arts. Target practice should not be part of the curriculum.”
BTU President Anna Fusco: “BTU stands with and sends our love to the teachers, staff and most importantly the students at Marjory Stoneman Douglas. We will continue the fight to create and maintain safe but welcoming learning environments in all schools.”
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| The American Federation of Teachers is a union of 1.7 million professionals that champions fairness; democracy; economic opportunity; and high-quality public education, healthcare and public services for our students, their families and our communities. We are committed to advancing these principles through community engagement, organizing, collective bargaining and political activism, and especially through the work our members do.
The Broward Teachers Union is the fifth-largest teachers union in the country. Its 12,000 members encompass teachers, education support professionals and technical support professionals who work for the Broward Public Schools. BTU also represents Pembroke Pines Charter School teachers.
The Florida Education Association is the state’s largest association of professional employees, with more than 140,000 members. FEA represents pre K-12 teachers, higher education faculty, educational staff professionals, students at our colleges and universities preparing to become teachers and retired education employees.
The National Education Association is the nation’s largest professional employee organization, representing more than 3 million elementary and secondary teachers, higher education faculty, education support professionals, school administrators, retired educators and students preparing to become teachers. Learn more at www.nea.org and follow on Twitter at @NEAmedia.
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Thank you one and all.
How sad that Valentine’s day has become a time for rememberance of so many tragedies.
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There was a story on the news of a principal in Florida that hired a combat veteran carrying an semi-automatic rifle to patrol the halls of his high school. Florida is still trying to recruit teachers to carry firearms, and there is now a law in place that requires having one armed person in each school building. DeSantis has also called for an inquiry into district safety plans. Too bad Florida does not feel the need to intervene in all the waste and fraud in charters with the same commitment as school safety plans.https://www.cnn.com/2019/02/13/us/florida-governor-school-safety-investigation/index.html
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It’s a charter school, and the hiring of a second gunman is in process.
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Here’s a link:https://www.wwlp.com/world/charter-school-guardians-armed-with-rifles/1780285856
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I think the students, staff and parents of Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School are some of the most amazing humans in our country. I do not know how they have found the fortitude to summon their anger, swallow their grief and lead the way forward in such a moral way. Yes, we are still far behind civilized countries in the control of weapons, but the national conversation has changed. The NRA will be defeated. We are in the debt of these courageous people as they bend the arc towards justice.
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These young people galvanized the entire country with their message of common sense gun control. One of victim’s parents is on the governor’s safety committee. Unlike most of the victims’ parents, he is in favor of arming school staff members which is probably why he was selected to be on the committee.
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https://www.theguardian.com/us-news/ng-interactive/2017/oct/02/america-mass-shootings-gun-violence
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This superb graphic makes very, very clear the extent of the problem.
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The graphic is stunning and shocking. It really shows how out of touch we are compared to the rest of the world.
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Thanks, Bob. The graphic made me want to look into each of the incidents. Sadly, I could not recall all of the incidents where a large group of people were killed or wounded. Becoming numb to mass shooting is understandable. Still, it seems I should remember if I truly cared about my fellow man.
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After the Sandy Hook incident in Newtown, I thought, well, this is it. The politicians HAVE to do something about our insane gun laws now. Surely, an event this repugnant, this shocking, this sick, will galvanize the public and force even the most vile or ignorant of them to do something. Well, that was many thousands of such incidents ago, and now we have a President who wants more guns in schools, in the hands of teachers. There’s no other word for this. It’s insane.
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My kids (grown) and I watched President Obama’s speech in the aftermath of Newtown. When he’d finished speaking, they asked me what did I think would happen next.
Nothing will happen, I said. It was a terrible thing to say especially as both their parents are teachers, and they could easily imagine a school shooting at their own schools or ours.
Now, something has begun to happen. The classmates of the children murdered at Newtown were too young to speak out for them, but teenagers? Their righteous rage propels them forward.
Here’s Emma Gonzalez, speaking in NY yesterday:
Emma González: “A lot of people either don’t know about or forget about the trauma of gun violence, and that it doesn’t only resurface on the anniversary of the event. Every day, I feel the same. Every day, my friends feel the same. Every day, it feels like the shooting is happening again or happened yesterday or will happen tomorrow. … For me and most of my friends, we fight our trauma by fighting against gun violence and the system that perpetrates it.”
https://www.democracynow.org/2019/2/15/headlines/parkland_shooting_survivor_emma_gonzalez_we_fight_our_trauma_by_fighting_against_gun_violence
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Here’s a video of Emma Gonzalez, speaking yesterday in New York:
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A parent’s remembrance of this event:
https://www.newsweek.com/day-my-daughter-never-came-home-school-1331717?utm_source=newsweek&utm_medium=push_notification&utm_campaign=onesignal
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“…to build safe sanctuaries where kids can learn free from fear of gun violence…”
This is sad. Kids in FL would need a walled tower like Quasimodo’s to be safe from the free-for-all of their concealed carry, stand your ground etc gun laws.
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The Kentucky Senate passed a bill 29 -8 that allows people to carry a concealed handgun without a permit or training. Next up the Kentucky House will vote on the NRA-backed bill. The current law allows for carrying weapons OPENLY without a license or training. In the name of “safety” the new lawmakes it legal to conceal the gun you carry. Reported in the Cincinnati Enquirer, p 14A, 2-15-2019.
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Here is an interesting article, on how one students feels about increased school security.
http://www.ascd.org/ascd-express/vol14/num16/after-march-for-our-lives-the-collateral-damage.aspx
Some students still feel that additional firearm-control legislation would make schools safer.
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Bureau of Labor Statistics
There were 500 workplace homicides in the United States in 2016
JANUARY 23, 2018
Homicides accounted for 10 percent of all fatal occupational injuries in the United States in 2016. There were 500 workplace homicides in 2016, an increase of 83 cases from 2015. The 2016 total was the highest since 2010. Of the workplace homicides in 2016, 409 (82 percent) were homicides to men and 91 (18 percent) were homicides to women. Homicides represented 24 percent of fatal occupational injuries to women in 2016 compared with 9 percent of fatal occupational injuries to men.
Relatives or domestic partners were the most frequent assailant in work-related homicides of women (40 percent) but accounted for 2 percent of assailants in homicides of men. Robbers were the most common assailant in work-related homicides of men (33 percent, compared with 16 percent in homicides of women).
Cashiers incurred the largest number of workplace homicides in 2016 (54 homicides, up from 35 in 2015). Other occupations with high numbers of homicides were first-line supervisors of retail sales workers (50 homicides, up from 40 in 2015) and police and sheriff’s patrol officers (50 homicides, up from 34 in 2015).
Shootings accounted for 394 workplace homicides in 2016 (79 percent of the total). Stabbing, cutting, slashing, and piercing incidents accounted for another 38 homicides (8 percent of the total). Hitting, kicking, beating, shoving accounted for 35 workplace homicides in 2016 (7 percent of the total).
These data are from the Injuries, Illnesses, and Fatalities program.
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