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National School Walkout renews calls for gun safety

National School Walkout renews calls for gun safety
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For the second time in two months, thousands of students from across the country are streaming out of class Friday as part of a National School Walkout to demand action on gun reform -- even as Florida police investigate a fresh shooting that injured a student Friday morning.

Students are walking out of class at 10 a.m. in each time zone to observe a moment of silence for shooting victims.

Before Friday's walkouts began, the latest school shooting happened in Ocala, Florida, northwest of Orlando. Police said a student was shot in the ankle at Ocala's Forest High School, and a suspect is in custody.

 

 

Friday's walkouts, while drawing momentum from February's mass shooting at South Florida's Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School, also marks the 1999 Columbine High School massacre in Colorado in which two gunmen killed 12 students and a teacher.

Many students across the country -- including current Columbine students -- say not enough has been done to help prevent mass shootings. In Florida, Stoneman Douglas freshman Ryan Servaites pointed to Friday's shooting in Ocala.

"The fact that it happened on this day, in a way, reinforces what we are trying to get across," he said.

"Enough is enough. Children are dying. Children are being hurt. We won't stop. This is why."

Besides observing moments of silence, other actions during the day include marching to a local lawmaker's office, allowing open-mic time for students to share concerns and helping register those who are eligible to vote. Students at more than 2,500 schools were to participate.

In Washington's Lafayette Square across from the White House, high school students gathered well before 10 a.m.

One of those demonstrators, Hiam Baidas of Falls Church, Virginia, said the country needs laws making it more difficult to buy guns.

"Right now I'm 18 years old, I live right across the street from Walmart, and I can go buy a gun -- and I don't think that's OK," she said.

"I think the youth are the movement that is going to change and better our country."

In New York's Washington Square Park, demonstrator Arielle Geismar, 16, said students will be persistent until gun laws are tightened.

"I've grown up in the generation of students who are realizing that we have lockdown drills all the time. We live with the constant fear that there is the possibility of a school shooting. No one should have to live like that," said Geismar, co-founder of the gun control activist group NYC Says Enough.

Facing unexcused absences

In contrast to the March 14 national walkout -- in which students generally walked out for 17 minutes, one minute for each person killed at Stoneman Douglas -- many planned to walk out for the rest of Friday's classes.

So they may not see the same kind of leniency from school officials that some saw last month.

At Stoneman Douglas in Parkland, where a gunman massacred 17 people two months ago, Principal Ty Thompson told students Thursday that they will face disciplinary action if they leave campus.

Several teachers told CNN that the disciplinary actionwill be an unexcused absence.

Students in New York City who walk out for remainder of the day also will be marked with unexcused absences, city public schools spokeswoman Miranda Barbot said.

On Friday morning, Stoneman Douglas students held moments of silence in a courtyard and then made a choice -- some remained on campus, but others left for a community park, where they volunteered to pick up trash. Student leaders urged both groups to register to vote.

Among those who walked out was student and gun control activist David Hogg

"We're a diverse but unified front," Hogg said. "We have different ideas of how to go about this, and I think that's great, because we can do multiple things."

"So long as you register to vote, and so long as you vote on these issues in November, that's all that matters here," he said.

Stoneman Douglas teachers got an early start Friday, demonstrating outside the building before classes began.

Those teachers combined calls against gun violence with requests for more school funding.

"Enough is enough!" they chanted, holding signs with messages such as "Children's lives > assault rifles," "Arm me with school funding" and "Arm me with better pay and lower class size."

The organizer

Lane Murdock, 16, a sophomore from Ridgefield, Connecticut, launched the National School Walkout.

She was disturbed by her own reaction -- or lack thereof -- to the February massacre in Florida.

"When I found out about the shooting at MSD, I remember I didn't have a huge reaction. And because of that, I knew I needed to change myself, and we needed to change this country," Lane said.

"We should be horrified, and we're not anymore. It's American culture."

Lane said students should be empowered "to do the walkouts and become leaders in their communities, speaking up when they see inaction."

Push for legislation

The movement encourages young people to push for legislation at the state level if Congress doesn't act.

"The federal government can set standards and practices that apply to all states around gun safety. But states have the option of passing additional measures to protect their own residents from gun violence," its website says.

Students are calling for several measures, including banning assault weapons, high-capacity magazines and bump stocks; mandating universal background checks; placing a minimum age of 21 on all gun purchases; implementing waiting periods between a gun purchase and gun transfers; and allowing families to petition a court to remove guns from individuals at risk of injuring themselves.

While there hasn't been major congressional action since the Parkland massacre, some cities and states have toughened gun control.

In Florida, after Parkland students rallied at the state Capitol, Republican Gov. Rick Scott signed a gun bill called the Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Act. It raises the minimum age to buy any firearm in the state to 21, bans the sale or possession of bump fire stocks and adds $69 million in funding for mental health services in schools.

In Vermont, Republican Gov. Phil Scott banned bump stocks, limited the size of magazines, expanded background checks for gun purchases and raised the minimum age to purchase firearms to 21.