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  • 11
    May
    2013
    10:31am, EDT

    Task force recommends building new school at site of Sandy Hook massacre

    Reuters file

    A school bus takes Sandy Hook Elementary School pupils home from a temporary school Thursday, Jan. 3, the day they returned to classes after the killings of 20 classmates in December.

    By M. Alex Johnson, staff writer, NBC News

    Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., where a gunman killed 20 children and six adults in December, should be torn down and replaced with an entirely new school, the task force charged with determining its future decided Friday night.

    A task force of elected officials has recommended tearing down the elementary school where 20 first-graders and six educators were killed in December, and then rebuilding the school. The proposal will go before voters to decide. TODAY's Jenna Wolfe

    The 28 members of the Sandy Hook Elementary Building Task Force, voting unanimously, rejected alternatives under which the current school would have been be renovated or a new school would have been built at a new location, NBC Connecticut of Hartford reported. Voters must approve the plan before it can go into effect.


    Three weeks after the Dec. 14 shooting, pupils returned to classes at a former middle school seven miles from Sandy Hook. Relatives of victims of the shootings and other parents had been vehemently opposed to renovating and reopening the existing school.

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com

    "I will chain my body to it and to protest if they try to reopen it," said Erica Lafferty, daughter of Dawn Hochsprung, the school's principal, who was among those killed, told NBC Connecticut after no decision was made at a meeting last week.


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    "It should be knocked down," Lafferty said. "There should be some type of long-lasting memorial. I don't want people to walk into the building and say, 'Oh well, that's where Erica's mom got gunned down.' That's not OK."

    Officials have estimated the cost of renovating the current facility or building a new school at $47 million to $59 million.

    "Just tearing it down and building a new school in the same place is one of the solutions that would make the most sense," said Peter Caracciolo, the father of a Sandy Hook pupil.

    Daniel Krauss, whose daughter is a second-grader, told The Associated Press he was pleased by the panel's recommendation.

    "It's been a place for learning, for kids to grow up and it's going to go back to that," he said.

    Related:

    Emotions run high in debate over future of Sandy Hook school

    951 comments

    What's wrong with the building now. Seems like a waste of money.

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    Explore related topics: featured, crime, guns, newtown, sandy-hook, school-shootings
  • Updated
    4
    May
    2013
    1:44am, EDT

    Emotions run high in debate over future of Sandy Hook school

    No decision has been made as to whether to reopen Sandy Hook Elementary or move it to another location after a panel met to find a resolution to the matter. WVIT's George Collie reports.

    By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A decision on whether to reopen the Sandy Hook Elementary School building, where 20 first-graders and six staffers were massacred, was stalled Friday as emotions ran high at a town meeting.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    A task force of more than two dozen officials had narrowed down the choices to two: raze the existing Newtown, Conn., building and open a new school down the street, or renovate or rebuild on the existing site.

    But after a group of Sandy Hook teachers spoke privately to task force members before a public meeting on Friday night, the panel said it could not make an immediate decision and was looking at other options.

    When the teachers emerged from a closed-door executive session, some in tears, they declined to say what they had recommended, just that the conversation was "difficult."


    Newtown school board member Laura Roche said those teachers made it clear they never want to set foot in the building again. Task force members said they were re-evaluating their options and a vote won't happen until next week or later.

    Some victims' families have said they are horrified at the thought of children returning to the campus where Adam Lanza spilled so much blood during his Dec. 14 rampage.

    Julio Cortez / AP file

    A task force is deciding whether to reopen Sandy Hook Elementary School, seen here in an aerial photo.

    “I will chain my body to it and protest if they try to reopen it,” Erica Lafferty, the daughter of slain Sandy Hook Principal Dawn Hochsprung, told NBCConnecticut.com before the meeting. “It should be knocked down. There should be some type of long-lasting memorial.“

    Janet Zipperstein, mother of a fourth grader and a second grader, said kids should not have to return to the building where their schoolmates were executed or even to a new school nearby.

    "My second grader is never gonna step foot in Sandy Hook school," she vowed. "It's never gonna happen."

    Others said demolishing the building would send the wrong message.

    "It's not the building that was the problem. It was someone in the wrong frame of mind," said Steven Uhde, father of a Sandy Hook second grader.

    Frank Thorp V / NBC News

    Erica Lafferty, whose mother was the principal of Sandy Hook Elementary, thinks the school building should be torn down.

    "I don't want to give someone else that is in the wrong frame of mind this as the precedent -- to say, 'You know what? If I can't take out people, at least I'll wipe out the school.'"

    Mike Scarpa, father of two children who attended Sandy Hook, said a renovated building at the site would be a tribute -- "an incredible way to honor the 26 angels that were lost."

    Sandy Hook students who survived the shooting have been going to class in a repurposed school building in the neighboring town of Monroe. They can stay there through the 2016 school year as long as the school board approves a new lease.

    The task force originally considered 40 locations for a possible new school before narrowing the choices. It will make a recommendation to the school board.

    Whatever the decision, there will be precedent for it from other schools that have also been the scene of mass shootings.

    Columbine High School in Colorado demolished the library where most of the 12 victims of a 1999 shooting died, but reopened the rest of the facility within months.

    At California's Oikos University, where seven were killed in 2012, the classroom in question is now used only for theology classes. Virginia Tech, where 32 died in 2007, turned one of the classrooms into a violence prevention center.

    The West Nickel Mines Amish School in Pennsylvania, where five girls were shot dead in 2006, was torn down.

    George Colli of NBCConnecticut.com contributed to this report.

     

    This story was originally published on Fri May 3, 2013 6:26 PM EDT

    438 comments

    The people who don't want the school reopened should be happy to pay for a new school. All funds from anyone else should be voluntary. Not a cent of tax money should be used.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: featured, crime, guns, updated, newtown, sandy-hook, school-shootings
  • 30
    Jan
    2013
    7:38pm, EST

    School shooting drill in Illinois included sound of gunfire

    View more videos at: http://nbcchicago.com.

    By Natalie Martinez, NBCChicago.com

    A high school in the far northwest suburbs of Chicago was locked down for about 20 minutes on Wednesday afternoon after the sound of two gunshots rang through the halls.

    But the shooting -- done with blanks -- was all part of a drill to educate students and staffers at Cary-Grove High School in Cary, Ill., on what to do in the event of a real emergency. Cary is located about 45 miles northwest from downtown Chicago.

    "For fires through fire drills, we prepare them for tornadoes through tornado drills and unfortunately a reality of today is that we also need to prepare them for other safety concerns that are more immediate," said district 155 spokesman Jeff Puma.

    Police and administrators did a complete sweep of the building after two shots were fired at opposite ends of the school. Students were ushered to the corners of their classrooms as if a gunman were roaming school grounds.

    Reaction from students was mixed.



    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "We learned, like, where to go and stuff, so that was helpful," said one student.

    "I feel like they could have done it better. Honestly, more blanks around the school because for the most part you really couldn't hear it," said another.

    Also on NBCChicago.com: Teen girl among 3 dead, 8 wounded in Tuesday shootings

    Despite the difference of opinions, administrators and police said the information learned could be life-saving.

    "The idea was to allow our students to have something in their head of what it might sound like in order to react more quickly," said Puma.

    Many parents notified of the "code red simulation" earlier this week said the simulated gunfire was too strong a tactic.

    "It's sad, but the reality is these things happen," said Cary police Chief Steven Casstevens.

    A district official said Wednesday's drill wasn't the first conducted in the wake of the Sandy Hook school shooting. The first was done just four days after the Newtown, Conn., tragedy.

    Previous story from NBCChicago.com: Parents uneasy about simulated school shooting

    73 comments

    Great. Brilliant.

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    Explore related topics: illinois, guns, school-shootings, nbcchicago, cary, school-safety, safety-drills
  • 11
    Jan
    2013
    8:30pm, EST

    Dad poses as gunman to test school security, gets arrested

    View more videos at: http://nbcdfw.com.

    By Vignesh Ramachandran, Staff Writer, NBC News

    A Texas man is facing third-degree felony charges of making a terroristic threat after he allegedly told elementary school staffers he brought a gun to the building, NBCDFW.com reported.

    Officials say Ronald Miller was unarmed Wednesday when he told a school greeter outside Celina Elementary School that he had a gun, according to NBCDFW.com. The town of Celina is just north of Dallas.

    The greeter froze in panic when Miller said he was a gunman and his target was inside, Celina Independent School District Superintendent Donny O'Dell told NBCDFW.com. Miller was then able to walk into the school and entered the office.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    "He told them that he is a shooter and 'you're dead, and you're dead,'" O'Dell told NBCDFW.com. Never showing a weapon, Miller then reportedly revealed his stunt was a test of school safety and he wanted to talk to the principal.

    School staffers knew Miller, who was a father of a student, and police were not called until he left the school, The Dallas Morning News reported. He was arrested Wednesday evening and is being held in lieu of $75,000 bail, the newspaper added.

    School security and gun control have been hotly debated since the Dec. 14 shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., claimed the lives of 20 children and six adult staffers.


    In a letter to parents dated Thursday, O'Dell said Wednesday's test was done "in a rogue manner."

    "We have always had a security plan in place that involved our police officials," O'Dell wrote. "However, because of recent events we have ramped-up our security efforts on all campuses."

    O'Dell did not respond to NBC News' phone and email requests for comment Friday. Representatives of the Celina PTA board did not respond to email requests for comment Friday.

    David Siano, a parent at the school, told NBCDFW.com that the incident shows that "we are not prepared."

    "His intent was just simply to say, 'you've done nothing' and that's what it showed," Siano said. "So (if) that’s what it takes, it’s a shame."

    Another parent Misti Schramme told The Dallas Morning News she trusts security measures in Celina and thinks her child's school is safe: "You can’t live in fear all the time."

    School safety expert Ken Trump told NBC News on Friday that he encourages parents to "ask probing questions" about their child's school security and emergency prep.

    But he advises: "Don’t go off the deep end to be overly dramatic." Instead, Trump recommended that parents choose avenues like scheduling an appointment with the principal, attending safety or crisis team meetings at the school, or going to the school's PTA.

    In the last few decades, Americans have witnessed a number of high-profile school shootings, including the 2007 attack at Virginia Tech and the 1999 massacre at Columbine High School in Colorado.

    On Thursday, an armed student entered a Taft, Calif. high school and wounded a 16-year-old teen. A teacher and campus supervisor persuaded the shooter to drop the gun.

    NBCDFW.com's Catherine Ross contributed to this story.

    Related stories

    • Schools seek security after Sandy Hook
    • Teachers learn the A-B-Cs of gun ownership


    986 comments

    Dumbass.

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    Explore related topics: security, crime, texas, school-shootings, school-safety
  • 3
    Jan
    2013
    8:22pm, EST

    Full buses bring 'excited' Sandy Hook students to new school

    After three long and challenging weeks, Sandy Hook Elementary students returned to class Thursday at a nearby middle school in Monroe, Conn., where they will remain until their old school is no longer designated a crime scene. NBC's Rehema Ellis reports.

    By Tracy Connor, Staff Writer, NBC News

    The children of Sandy Hook Elementary School returned to class Thursday, filling buses that took them to a new building where they were thrilled to reconnect with their friends and teachers after three weeks of mourning.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    “Most of the kids were excited,” said Monroe, Conn., Police Lt. Keith White.

    “They were anxious to get into the hallways and meet up with the other kids, and you could see the teachers had the same response.”

    The 400-plus students had not been back to school since Adam Lanza blasted his way into Sandy Hook and killed 20 first-graders, six staffers and himself with a semi-automatic rifle.

    Their old school in Newtown is still a crime scene, so an unused middle school in nearby Monroe was refurnished for them.


    Teachers tried to make the new surroundings as familiar as possible. Their old desks were brought in, along with backpacks, coats, and lunch boxes that were left behind as they fled on Dec. 14.

    Even the new principal was a known face: Donna Page, who retired from the role at Sandy Hook in 2010, agreed to come back after her successor, Dawn Hochsprung, was killed in the rampage.

    Yet there were also reminders of how much the Sandy Hook community has changed since the shooting rocked the nation and stirred debate on gun control.

    Monroe Police Dept. / AP

    This photo provided by the Monroe Police Department shows the new Sandy Hook Elementary School on the first day of classes in Monroe, Conn. The school, formerly known as Chalk Hill School, was overhauled especially for the students from Sandy Hook

    Police officers and counselors were on hand. Parents were allowed to stay in the building for the day. And children cuddled with therapy dogs.

    He said attendance was robust, with most school buses full as they rumbled down streets that had been decorated with balloons and welcome signs.

    Andrew Paley said he waited for the bus with his 9-year-old twins at the bottom of his driveway Thursday morning.

    “They just ran on. They didn’t even look back,” he said. “There was probably some anxiety but it was more excitement. They both love school, so they loved going back.’

    PhotoBlog: See images of Sandy Hook students returning to class for first day

    While security was very visible, it will become more low-key as the weeks pass in an effort to restore some normalcy.

    “We don’t want them to think this is a police state,” White said. “We want them to know that this is a school and a school first, and that’s a place that they are to come to learn, enjoy their friends and grow up.

    “We want to move on and let the kids move on, too.”

    Lt. Keith White says Sandy Hook students were excited to see friends as they returned to school on Thursday for the first time since the Dec. 14 massacre in Newtown, Conn.

    Connecticut Gov. Dannel Malloy said it took a “Herculean effort” to prepare the school in Monroe for the Sandy Hook kids.

    He also announced a commission that will spearhead legislative and policy reforms designed to ensure no other children have to endure the horror they survived.

    “We don’t yet know the underlying cause behind this tragedy, and we probably never will,” he said, referring the mystery of Lanza’s motive for attacking the school. “But that cannot be an excuse for inaction.”

    He said the 15-member commission would look at three areas -- school security, mental health services, and gun laws.

    “If 30-round clips had continued to be illegal in the nation or in our state, the availability of that clip to this particular perpetrator may not have existed,” Malloy said.

    “These things aren’t used to hunt deer. You don’t need a 30-round clip to go hunting ... to honor the Constitution of the United States.”

    The panel, which will issue recommendations in March, will be headed by Hamden Mayor Scott Jackson, who said the issues resonated with him personally.

    “This is an issue that touches us all,” Jackson said. “My son is in first grade.”

    NBC News' Joo Lee contributed to this report.

    Shannon Stapleton / Reuters

    Children from Sandy Hook Elementary School make their way to their new school in Monroe Conn. As they leave Newtown on Jan. 3.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

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    • 'Disgusting': Families of massacre victims boycott Colorado theater reopening

    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    150 comments

    Good thoughts are going out to the kids who are returning to school and their parents today.

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  • 29
    Dec
    2012
    10:58am, EST

    Arizona sheriff orders armed 'posse' to patrol schools

    A controversial Arizona sheriff wants an armed group of volunteers to stand guard at his county's schools. His plan has been met with outrage from many educators who say more guns in schools will be dangerous. NBC's Diana Alvear reports.

    By Miranda Leitsinger, Staff Writer, NBC News

    Arizona sheriffs and the state’s attorney general are pushing controversial programs to allow school officials and volunteers to carry guns in the wake of the shootings at a Connecticut school that left 20 children dead.

    The latest proposal comes from Sheriff Joe Arpaio, the self-described toughest sheriff in America, who wants to station his “posse” of volunteers outside of about 50 schools in Maricopa County within a week, according to KPNX, a local NBC station.


     

    Follow @mimileitsinger

    “Everybody else is talking about what their ideas are. They want new laws. This is immediate. I don't need a new law to send out my posse,” he told NBC affiliate, KPNX, on Thursday. “I feel like we should do whatever we can outside of the schools.”

    Arpaio’s volunteers number about 3,000, with 300 to 400 carrying weapons. They log about 100 hours of training and undergo background checks, just like deputies, according to KPNX.

    He first sent out his posse in 1993 to guard malls over the holiday season because of violence at those venues in the past. He believed that program worked, saying there have been zero violent re-occurrences, azfamily.com reported.

    Arpaio’s plan follows similar ones released earlier this week: Pinal County Sheriff Paul Babeu has proposed arming willing principals, according to ABC15.com, while Arizona Attorney General Tom Horne said he wanted to arm a designated employee in every school, KPNX reported.

    “Why not use these people we trust if they are willing to protect themselves and our children?” Babeu said.

    Horne said a few counties have indicated they’d like to sign up for his program, though state law currently prohibits having firearms on public school campuses. Horne said he already has a sponsor for the necessary state legislation to implement his plan.

    A controversial plan from Arizona's Sheriff Arpaio will send armed members of his volunteer posse to some Phoenix schools to provide security. Oralia Ortega, of KPNX, reports.

    Anti-gun advocates and former educators denounced the idea of arming school staffers. Geraldine Hills, of Arizonans for Gun Safety, called it “outrageous.”


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    “Cops aren’t teachers, teachers aren’t cops,” she told KPNX. “It’s a very nice what-if scenario, this fantasy of the armed civilian hero. It doesn’t play out in real life.”

    “I don’t feel that I would want to be in a position of being responsible for either a concealed weapon or securing a weapon on campus,” Gregg Baumgarten, a former principle outside of Phoenix, told the station. “I just think it’s a recipe for disaster.”

    The Arizona officials’ stance echoed that of the National Rifle Association chief Wayne LaPierre, who said he supported putting armed guards and police in schools in response to the Newtown shootings in which the gunman, Adam Lanza, also shot six administrators dead. Police say Lanza shot his mother to death earlier at their home.

    “If it’s crazy to call for putting police in and securing our schools to protect our children, then call me crazy,” LaPierre told NBC’s David Gregory. “I think the American people think it’s crazy not to do it. It’s the one thing that would keep people safe and the NRA is going try to do that.”

    Some districts said they were preparing to take LaPierre’s recommended action, while other educators cautioned that doing so would send the wrong message about education.

    After a controversial press conference last week, NRA head Wayne LaPierre made an appearance on NBC's "Meet the Press" saying the American people would be "crazy" to not put armed guards in schools. Meanwhile, Newtown, Conn., continues coping with the death of 26 people during the tragic shooting. NBC's Ron Mott report.

    More content from NBCNews.com:

    • Westboro church's threat to picket Newtown sparks call for action
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    • Desert Storm commander Norman Schwarzkopf dies at 78
    • Guns flood into police buyback programs, though critics have doubts

    Follow US news from NBCNews.com on Twitter and Facebook

     

    1980 comments

    What do you think the chances of a George Zimmerman type being among this yahoo's "posse?"

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  • 15
    Dec
    2012
    7:42am, EST

    Mass traumas ripple across towns — and time

    The massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School shook everyone in Newtown, Conn., including the first responders, who will be undergoing counseling. NBC's Anne Thompson reports.

    By Bill Briggs, NBC News contributor

    A serial tragedy — like Friday's mass shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., that left 20 children dead — is like “a big rock thrown in a pond,” grief experts say, casting emotional ringlets that drench those closest to the bloodshed in life-changing despair and bathe entire communities and even distant observers in sorrow.

    "What happens after that rock lands in the pond? The waves circulate out from ground zero. There are the victims. And these (at Sandy Hook Elementary School) are babies, so unbelievably sad,” said Dr. Jeff Dolgan, chief psychologist at Children's Hospital in Denver. “Some people are not even directly touched by the trauma but are in fact traumatized — think about the other kids at the school, the administrators at the school, the first responders, the caregivers. Then the waves radiate out from the school into the community."

    Those ripples may initially unite a town in candlelight and song then splinter it into a torrent of blame and lawsuits, as happened after the Columbine High School shootings in 1999 that killed 12 students and one teacher and injured 24 others.

    "At Columbine, the impact was very widely felt. I talked to the people who were dealing with the fatalities at the hospitals. They had caregiver trauma. They did everything they could with the influx of severely injured but felt inadequate to the task,” he added.

    After the Columbine massacre, Dolgan and his colleagues aligned with mental health experts in Jefferson County, Colo., launching a hotline where local parents could call for advice on soothing their own kids' anxieties. On Friday, Dolgan urged the parents in Newtown to similarly band together.


    “This is a neighborhood elementary school and the parents there hopefully are tight-knit. Once you have the care done, I hope the parents are supportive of one another and work with one another,” Dolgan said. “I hope parents team up and, in time, do get-togethers.”

    Dolgan witnessed firsthand how some Columbine families looked initially to condemn and penalize neighboring families and local law enforcement officers for the deaths in their school. The families of more than 30 Columbine victims sued the parents of the two killers, also Columbine students, eventually settling for $2.53 million. The families of 17 Columbine victims also sued the Jefferson County sheriff’s department; one of those victims settled in 2004 for $117,500.

    President Obama addressed the nation in an emotionally charged speech Friday, wiping away tears as he expressed sympathy for the families of the victims killed in the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre.

    Many of the Columbine families, Dolgan agreed, were likely seeking outlets to vent their anger at the tragic event, and at the murders.

    “But who are you going to blame? The first responders? No. (Columbine principal Frank) DeAngelis? No. The school security? No,” Dolgan said. “In time, there was more healing and the parents came together. But initially, no, there were some fractious qualities.”

    While heartache and fury may engulf a town after a mass killing, such serial traumas psychologically damage those closest to the suffering on a far deeper level than they do people who were merely in the vicinity, who were, perhaps, close enough to hear the gunfire but not see the deaths, science has found. 

    Among 1,000 students who were on campus at Dawson College in Montreal in 2006 when a man shot and wounded 19 people, killing one, about one-third were found to be dealing with some form of mental illness within 18 months of that tragedy, according to a paper published in 2009. 

    “The most common form was clinical depression – which affected 12 percent or 1 in 8. That is about three times higher than would be expected in a normal population,” said Dr. Warren Steiner, head of the department of psychiatry at McGill University Health Centre in Montreal, and one of the paper's authors.

    “The next highest was substance abuse — drug or alcohol — which affected about 10 percent, people who were self-treating their own anxieties. That’s about three times higher than you would see in the normal population,” Steiner said.

    The precise proximity of the survivors to the violence that day directly affected their mental health later, the research team learned. They divided the 1,000 students into four groups based on their “level of exposure.” Those who had witnessed the shootings received the “highest” exposure score, followed by those who only heard gunfire, followed by those who locked themselves into classrooms without knowing if they were next, followed by those who were on campus but unaware of the attacks.

    Slideshow: Connecticut school massacre

    Michelle Mcloughlin / Reuters

    The second deadliest school shooting in U.S. history sent crying children spilling into the school parking lot as frightened parents waited for word on their loved ones.

    Launch slideshow

    “There was a direct correlation between the level of exposure to the shootings and the development of mental illness. It’s common sense, but it had never been proven before,” Steiner said.

    For those who viewed the killings, or who had held a wounded classmate in their arms, post-traumatic stress disorder was the most commonly diagnosed illness, followed by depression and then alcohol dependency. 

    But while the mass traumas at Columbine and Dawson College soaked each community in immediate anguish -- and, eventually, imbued those closest to the gunfire with psychological turmoil -- they continue to resonate in the Denver area and in Montreal, the psychologists said.

    Memories of each are rekindled after the news of other serial shootings, including the 32 people who were shot and killed at Virginia Tech in 2007, the 13 people who were shot and killed at Fort Hood in 2009, and the 70 moviegoers who were shot — 12 fatally — in Aurora, Colo. on July 20.

    “You hear about another one, and there’s the reflex of anxiety,” Steiner said. “I guarantee everyone who was at Dawson will hear the news this evening and they will have flashbacks and disturbing memories, PTSD-like symptoms from what happened to them.

    “It goes on for a generation, no doubt about that,” Steiner said.

    Dolgan agreed that the shelf-life of a local mass tragedy sticks with a community for several decades, and isn't simply shaken by the passing of time.

    “No, no,” Dolgan said. “This is very long-lived.”

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    46 comments

    Hey kids. You. The Ones that left us today. The ones who experienced the worst that humanity can do. You little angels who closed your eyes in a living Hell this morning. I'm so, so very sorry that this world didn't give you a chance. You would've never known me. But in all of this overwhelming sad …

    Show more
    Explore related topics: depression, connecticut, anxiety, virginia-tech, ptsd, fort-hood, newtown, substance-abuse, sandy-hook-elementary-school, school-shootings, dawson-college, columbina
  • 22
    Aug
    2012
    4:47pm, EDT

    Police ask Illinois school district to let them install gun safes

    By NBCChicago.com and NBC News staff

    Four high schools in an Illinois school district could get some firepower for added protection if the Police Department has its way.


    Follow @NBCNewsUS

    Police in Plainfield, a town of 37,000 about 40 miles southwest of Chicago, asked the district to install locked gun safes to keep a rifle and important information at several schools in the event there's a shooter on campus, according to Plainfield School District 202.


    The safe could include a "long gun, such as an AR 15 rifle," according to the request, and would be stored in the offices of school police officers, who would be the only ones with access.

    Watch US News videos on NBCNews.com

    The request was made for Plainfield Central Campus, Plainfield East, Plainfield North and Plainfield Academy. Plainfield South High School was not be included.

    "Unfortunately, in today’s society active shooter incidents are no longer something we see on TV," Police Chief John Konopek said in a statement. "They are reality."

    Plainfield hasn't experienced a campus shooting, and Konopek said he wants to keep it that way.

    "We have found, through our training, officers are much better equipped to handle this type of incident utilizing a long gun … rather than a handgun," he said.

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    The school board has not yet voted on the request. A committee is set to review it Sept. 19.

    The debate over how to best protect students and staff in the nation's schools has increased in the last few years.

    "A lot of (school) boards don't even want police with guns on campus," Peter Pochowski of the National Association of School Safety and Law Enforcement Officials, told NBC News.

    Pochowski said he's not aware of any other school in the nation at which police use safes for gun storage on campus.

    One Texas school district allows teachers and staff members to bring guns in order to deter and protect against school shootings. 

    The Harrold Independent School District approved the measure in 2008 partly because of the 30-minute drive it would take for police to respond to emergencies on school grounds. The district has only one school, with all students attending class in the same building.

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    30 comments

    Assault rifle, not a long gun, love how they use different words.

    Show more
    Explore related topics: school-shootings, gun-safety, conceal-and-carry-laws

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