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  • 2018-02-27 (xsd:date)
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  • Did California's Governor Ban Teachers from Shooting Back at School Shooters? (en)
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  • In February 2018, as Americans still reeled from a deadly school shooting in Florida and gun lobbying groups floated proposals to arm teachers to defend their classrooms, various web sites posted articles conveying the claim that Gov. Jerry Brown had signed a law in California prohibiting teachers from doing just that. Liberals want to ban teachers from having their God-given right to defend the young and innocent from mass shooters, wrote the author of a 22 February post on the web sites Right Edition and Truth and Action: In fact, however, California's AB 424 was not enacted in reaction to the Florida high school shooting. It had been passed and signed by the state's governor several months before that event, in October 2017. Nor is banning teachers from being able to shoot back an objective and impartial description of the bill's content. (A 15 October 2017 article from Breitbart was similarly misleading, alleging that Gov. Brown had signed a bill ensuring that teachers can't shoot back if attacked.) The main consequence of the bill's passage is that K-12 school district officials are no longer able to grant special authorization for teachers and other school employees to carry firearms on school grounds — an exception to California's Gun-Free School Zone Act of 1995 that was rarely taken advantage of in the first place. The official summary of AB 424 reads as follows: The Gun-Free School Zone Act originally prohibited the possession of firearms on or within 1,000 feet of school grounds, except in two cases: concealed weapons permit holders were permitted to carry firearms in gun-free school zones (a provision that had already been repealed in 2015), and persons granted written permission by school district authorities could do so (the provision that was repealed by AB 424). Since AB 424 went into effect on 1 January 2018, it has been illegal for anyone besides security guards, law enforcement officers, military personnel engaged in official duties, and armored vehicle guards to possess firearms on or near K-12 school grounds in California. The law does not apply to college campuses. Only a handful of California's roughly 1,024 school districts had actually initiated programs to grant school employees permission to carry weapons, according to the Sacramento Bee (Associated Press estimated the number at about five). The Wall Street Journal reported that at least eight states currently allowed teachers in some capacity to carry guns on K-12 school grounds. Forty-four percent of Americans surveyed in a CBS News poll taken after the Parkland, Florida, school shootings favored allowing more teachers to carry guns. (en)
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