291betone review.Claim Your Free 999 Pesos Bonus Today https://www.academytrans.com/category/gun-safety/ Shining brightest where it’s dark Fri, 20 Sep 2024 19:07:11 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://www.academytrans.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/11/cropped-Kentucky-Lantern-Icon-32x32.png Gun Safety Archives • Kentucky Lantern https://www.academytrans.com/category/gun-safety/ 32 32 Eastern Kentucky sheriff charged with murder in shooting death of judge at courthouse in Whitesburg https://www.academytrans.com/2024/09/19/report-eastern-kentucky-sheriff-arrested-for-allegedly-shooting-judge/ Thu, 19 Sep 2024 20:54:39 +0000 https://www.academytrans.com/?post_type=briefs&p=22072

District Judge Kevin Mullins was pronounced dead at the courthouse in Whitesburg. (Kentucky Court of Justice photo)

A sheriff in Eastern Kentucky has been charged with murder after allegedly shooting a district court judge Thursday at the Letcher County Courthouse in Whitesburg.?

Kentucky State Police said District Judge Kevin Mullins, 54, was pronounced dead at the scene with multiple gunshot wounds.

Letcher County Sheriff Shawn M. “Mickey” Stines, 43, was charged with one count of murder in the first degree, according to a news release by state police Thursday night.

Stines ??fatally shot Mullins following an argument inside the courthouse, state police said, and Stines was taken into custody at the scene without incident.?

The Mountain Eagle reported Thursday reported that Stines had “allegedly walked into the judge’s outer office, told court employees and others gathered there that he needed to speak with Mullins alone. The two then went into the inner office, closed the door and those outside heard shots. Stines walked out with his hands up and surrendered to police.” The newspaper reported that Stines had been seen handcuffed in the courthouse foyer.

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear in a social media post? wrote that he’d been informed a Letcher County district judge had been shot and killed in his chambers. “There is far too much violence in this world, and I pray there is a path to a better tomorrow,” Beshear wrote on social media.

On Friday morning, Beshear, answering questions during a news briefing, said it would be inappropriate for him to comment on the investigation and appeared to allude to rumors circulating about motive. “I know there’s a whole lot that’s out there on the internet and elsewhere. This is an active, ongoing investigation,” Beshear said. As a former prosecutor and the former AG, I’m not going to comment on any pieces of it to make sure that the state police can continue that investigation. They will follow the evidence. When they have it, they will comment on motive, and then it will be prosecuted by the Commonwealth attorney, Jackie Steele.”

Letcher County Schools posted on social media that Kentucky State Police had advised them to go into lockdown Thursday because of the shooting.?

Kentucky Attorney General Russell Coleman in a social media post wrote he and 27th Judicial Circuit Commonwealth’s Attorney Jackie Steele, who serves Knox and Laurel counties, would collaborate as special prosecutors in the case involving the “deadly shooting” and that the two would “fully investigate and pursue justice.”

Letcher County Courthouse in Whitesburg. (Kentucky Court of Justice)

Kentucky Chief Justice Laurance VanMeter in a statement Thursday night expressed shock “at this act of violence” and said the court system is shaken by the news. He said his prayers are with Mullins’ “family and the Letcher County community as they try to process and mourn this tragic loss. I ask for respect and privacy on their behalf.

“We will continue to monitor this situation. Out of respect for the ongoing investigation, we are unable to share further details. We are committed to supporting law enforcement in their efforts and will avoid any actions that could impede their important work. Our priority at this time is the well-being and safety of the Kentucky Court of Justice family.”

Mullins, of Jackhorn, was an assistant commonwealth’s attorney before being appointed district judge in 2009. He won election to the office in 2010. He is a graduate of the University of Kentucky and University of Louisville law school.

Stines, of McRoberts, was elected sheriff in 2018 and reelected in 2022. The Mountain Eagle reported in 2019 that Stines worked briefly as a Neon police officer and for the Letcher County sheriff and then worked for six years as a court bailiff in Letcher County until becoming sheriff.

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U.S. Supreme Court overturns ban on bump stocks used in Las Vegas mass shooting https://www.academytrans.com/2024/06/14/u-s-supreme-court-overturns-ban-on-bump-stocks-used-in-las-vegas-mass-shooting/ https://www.academytrans.com/2024/06/14/u-s-supreme-court-overturns-ban-on-bump-stocks-used-in-las-vegas-mass-shooting/#respond Fri, 14 Jun 2024 17:34:00 +0000 https://www.academytrans.com/?p=18811

A 7.62X39mm round sits next a a 30-round magazine and an AK-47 with a bump stock installed at Good Guys Gun and Range in Orem, Utah, on Feb. 21, 2018. The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday struck down a 2018 rule to ban bump stocks, which allow semiautomatic rifles to fire at a rapid rate similar to fully automatic guns. (Photo by George Frey/Getty Images)

WASHINGTON — The U.S. Supreme Court on Friday struck down a rule enacted following a 2017 mass shooting in Las Vegas that defined a semiautomatic rifle equipped with a bump stock attachment as a machine gun, which is generally prohibited under federal law.

The opinion, written by Justice Clarence Thomas, reduces the executive branch’s already-limited ability to address gun violence. Thomas, a strong defender of Second Amendment gun rights, wrote that the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives exceeded its statutory authority in prohibiting the sale and possession of bump stocks, which he said differed importantly from machine guns.

“Nothing changes when a semiautomatic rifle is equipped with a bump stock,” Thomas wrote. “Between every shot, the shooter must release pressure from the trigger and allow it to reset before reengaging the trigger for another shot.”

The case,?Garland v. Cargill, was a 6-3 decision that broke along the court’s established ideological lines.

Justice Sonia Sotomayor, the senior member of the court’s liberal wing, wrote the dissent, and argued that the decision puts “bump stocks back in civilian hands.”

“When I see a bird that walks like a duck, swims like a duck, and quacks like a duck, I call that bird a duck,” she wrote. “A bump-stock-equipped semiautomatic rifle fires ‘automatically more than one shot, without manual reloading, by a single function of the trigger.’ Because I, like Congress, call that a machinegun, I respectfully dissent.”

Kentucky State Rep. Josh Bray, R-Mount Veron celebrated the U.S. Supreme Court’s ruling that overturned the federal ban to prohibit the sale and possession of bump stocks.

In 2023, Bray carried legislation?to prohibit law enforcement and public funds in Kentucky from going? toward enforcing any federal ban on firearms, ammunition and firearm accessories. It?became law?with Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear’s signature.

“I applaud the Court’s ruling and appreciate that, based on arguments, it appears to be based almost entirely on the factual difference in the mechanics, use, and performance of bump stocks versus machine guns,” Bray said in a statement. “The ban far exceeded the authority of a government agency as any changes in federal law fall to the elected members of the U.S. Congress.”

Gun safety setback

The White House slammed the decision.

“Today’s decision strikes down an important gun safety regulation,” President Joe Biden said in a statement. “Americans should not have to live in fear of this mass devastation.”

Biden called on Congress to ban bump stocks and assault weapons, but any gun-related legislation is likely to be stalled with Republicans controlling the House and Democrats holding only a slim majority in the Senate.

“Bump stocks have played a devastating role in many of the horrific mass shootings in our country, but sadly it’s no surprise to see the Supreme Court roll back this necessary public safety rule as they push their out of touch extreme agenda,” Senate Majority Leader Chuck Schumer said in a statement.

Trump-era rule

This case stems from a regulation set during the Trump administration,?following the mass shooting?in Las Vegas. A gunman used rifles outfitted with bump stocks to fire into a crowd at a music festival, killing 58 people that night and two more who died of their injuries later, and injuring more than 500.

The next year, the ATF issued the rule that concluded bump stocks are illegal machine guns. Anyone who owned or possessed a bump stock was required to either destroy the material or turn it in to the agency to avoid criminal penalties.

Michael Cargill, a gun shop owner in Austin, Texas, surrendered two bump stocks to ATF and then challenged the rule in federal court.

A U.S. district court dismissed his case, but the U.S. Court of Appeals for the 5th Circuit agreed with Cargill that a 1986 law’s definition of a machine gun does not apply to bump stocks because the rifles equipped with the attachments don’t shoot multiple bullets “automatically,” or “by a single function of the trigger.”

That law defined a machine gun as “any weapon which shoots, is designed to shoot, or can be readily restored to shoot, automatically more than one shot, without manual reloading, by a single function of the trigger.”

The Biden administration appealed the 5th Circuit’s decision to the Supreme Court.

High court arguments

In oral arguments, the Biden administration defended the Trump-era rule and said that bump stocks allow semiautomatic rifles to fire automatically with a single pull of the trigger.

Attorneys for Cargill argued that bump stocks are used by repeatedly pulling the trigger, rather than firing automatically with a single pull.

In her dissent, Sotomayor said the decision will limit the federal government’s “efforts to keep machineguns from gunmen like the Las Vegas shooter.”

Thomas also wrote a major gun?decision?in 2022 that invalidated a New York law against carrying a firearm in public without showing a special need for protection. The court decided the case on 14th Amendment grounds, but it also expanded Second Amendment rights.

Because of that 2022 decision, another gun related case is?before the court?this session that tests a federal law that prevents the possession of firearms by a person who is subject to a domestic violence protective order. A decision is expected this month.

GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

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Biden touts gun safety record to advocates, as son found guilty on felony charges https://www.academytrans.com/2024/06/11/biden-touts-gun-safety-record-to-advocates-as-son-found-guilty-on-felony-charges/ https://www.academytrans.com/2024/06/11/biden-touts-gun-safety-record-to-advocates-as-son-found-guilty-on-felony-charges/#respond Tue, 11 Jun 2024 22:03:35 +0000 https://www.academytrans.com/?p=18736

President Joe Biden speaks to a conference hosted by Everytown for Gun Safety in Washington on June 11, 2024. (Screenshot from CSPAN livestream.)

WASHINGTON — President Joe Biden on Tuesday touted his administration’s efforts to reduce gun violence as the second anniversary of bipartisan gun safety legislation he signed into law approaches.

“Never give up on hope,” Biden said during an annual conference hosted by the advocacy group Everytown for Gun Safety.

The speech came hours after the president’s son Hunter Biden was found guilty in a federal court in Delaware of lying on paperwork related to purchasing a gun and unlawfully possessing that gun, according to media reports.

The federal jury found Hunter Biden, who has struggled with drug addiction, guilty on three related felony charges: lying to a licensed gun dealer, falsely stating on an application for a gun that he was not using drugs and for unlawfully having the gun for 11 days.

He could face up to 25 years in prison, though as a first-time offender his sentence is expected to be much less severe.

The president has avoided publicly commenting on his son’s case and he did not mention the verdict in his speech.

Gaza protest

Shortly after Biden began his speech, he was interrupted by a protester who accused the president of being “complicit” in the high death toll of the Israel-Hamas war that has killed 35,000 Palestinians since Oct. 7, according to the Health Ministry in the Gaza Strip run by the Hamas-controlled government. An agreement over a U.S. backed cease-fire deal remains elusive.

The crowd immediately drowned out the protester. A group of protesters was removed, according to a White House pool report.

Biden tried to calm the crowd.

“That’s alright,” he said. “Folks, it’s ok, look they care, innocent children have been lost, they make a point.”

Law nears second anniversary

Biden went back to his speech, and thanked the gun safety advocates and survivors “who have turned their pain” into advocacy.

“You’ve helped power a movement,” Biden said.

The gun safety law Biden signed in 2022 was the most comprehensive federal gun safety legislation in nearly 30 years. It stemmed from two deadly mass shootings less than two weeks apart in 2022.

One was at an elementary school in Uvalde, Texas, where 19 children and two teachers were murdered, making it the second-deadliest mass shooting since the Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre in 2012.

The other was in Buffalo, New York, where a white supremacist targeted a Black neighborhood and killed 10 Black people in a grocery store.

The 2022 law provided $750 million for states to enact “red flag laws,” which allow the courts to temporarily remove a firearm from an individual who is a threat to themselves or others as well as $11 billion in mental health services for schools and families. The law cracked down on straw purchases, illegal transactions in which a buyer acquires a gun for someone else.

The bill also requires those who are under 21 and want to purchase a firearm to undergo a background check that takes into account a review of juvenile and mental health records. It also led to the creation of the White House Office of Gun Violence Prevention.

The Justice Department also announced Tuesday it has charged more than 500 people under provisions of the gun safety law to “target the unlawful trafficking and straw-purchasing of firearms.”

The statutes “directly prohibit straw purchasing and firearms trafficking and significantly enhance the penalties for those crimes, providing for up to 15 years in prison,” according to the Justice Department.

“Criminals rely on illegal gun traffickers and straw purchasers to obtain the weapons they use to harm our communities,” Attorney General Merrick Garland said in a statement.

More work to do

Biden acknowledged that more needs to be done on gun safety legislation and he called on Congress to ban assault weapons and require universal background checks and safe storage of firearms. In a divided Congress, any gun-related legislation is unlikely to pass.

The last time Congress passed major gun legislation was 1994, when then-President Bill Clinton signed a ban on assault weapons that spanned 10 years. When it expired, Congress did not renew the ban.

Biden also took a jab at his rival, former President Donald J. Trump, and said that he won’t tell people to “get over” a mass shooting.

After a school shooting in Perry, Iowa, the presumptive GOP presidential nominee said during a campaign speech in Sioux City, Iowa, that while the school shooting that left two dead – an 11-year-old student and the principal – was a “terrible thing that happened,” his advice was to “get over it. We have to move forward.”

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Pastoral counselors added to school ‘guardian’ bill as it clears House committee https://www.academytrans.com/2024/03/26/pastoral-counselors-added-to-school-guardian-bill-as-it-clears-house-committee/ https://www.academytrans.com/2024/03/26/pastoral-counselors-added-to-school-guardian-bill-as-it-clears-house-committee/#respond Tue, 26 Mar 2024 15:30:29 +0000 https://www.academytrans.com/?p=15969

Rep. Josh Calloway, R-Russell, introduced the amendment adding pastoral counselors to the school "guardian" bill. (LRC Public Information)

FRANKFORT — A bill authorizing armed “guardians” to fill vacant law enforcement positions in Kentucky schools was passed by a House committee Tuesday morning with several new additions, including one allowing pastoral counselors in schools.?

Discussion among House Education Committee members largely centered on an amendment for Senate Bill 2 from Irvington Republican Rep. Josh Calloway that would allow licensed pastoral counselors to serve on trauma-informed teams in schools. He said the addition “gives parents options if they’re helping direct that care inside the school” and allows schools to have more “options based on what type of trauma that they were dealing with.”?

The original Senate Bill 2 directed trauma-informed teams in schools to assist school employees who work with students who have experienced trauma in the past and record an annual report about its activities throughout the school year.?

Republicans and Democrats on the committee raised concerns about the addition, but the amendment ultimately passed in a vote of 13-3 and one pass vote.?

Rep. Steve Riley, R-Glasgow, said his vote was a “wishy-washy yes” as he believes some ministers could excel in this capacity while others could not. He said he wanted to support the bill moving out of committee to avoid killing the entire legislation.?

“I’m concerned that this got dropped on us real fast without us having a chance to process everything about this and I need a little more time to process it,” Riley said.?

Another Republican, Rep. Killian Timoney, of Nicholasville, agreed with Riley. Timoney said that he does see that the addition could address needs in some districts but he did not believe it was necessary with his knowledge of the mental health system. He said in the committee that he has served on trauma-informed teams in the past.?

“If the alternative is to remove trauma-informed care, I’ll take this,” Timoney said.?

Rep. Josie Raymond, D-Louisville (LRC Public Information)

While voting no on the amendment, Louisville Democratic Rep. Tina Bojanowski, a teacher, said the committee had little preparation to consider the amendment that “some people would consider extreme” and added that not all of the questions were answered during the meeting.?

Another Louisville Democratic lawmaker, Rep. Josie Raymond, voted no because “school is school and church is church.”?

The primary sponsor of SB 2, Sen. Max Wise, R-Campbellsville, said he supported Calloway’s amendment as students who need mental health assistance could have “more offerings” under the change.?

Abby Piper, a lobbyist representing the Kentucky School Counselors Association, told the committee the organization was not consulted about the amendment and isn’t supportive of it. However, the association is supportive of SB 2 and the committee substitute adopted Tuesday.?

After the meeting, the association released a statement urging Kentuckians to tell their lawmakers to oppose Senate Bill 2.

According to the active license directory for the Kentucky Board of Licensure for Pastoral Counselors, the state has 33 active license holders.

Other changes

The committee also adopted a substitute version of the bill Tuesday. Chairman Rep. James Tipton, R-Taylorsville, said the changes included more oversight of the school “guardian” program by giving the Kentucky Center for School Safety a staffer to coordinate the program if funds are available. Tipton said funds were included in the Senate’s proposed budget.?

Under Wise’s original proposal, certified “guardians” would include honorably discharged military veterans and retired or former law enforcement officers. Other states like Florida have similar programs.?

Another change in the committee was that if a local school board does decide to employ a “guardian,” it must enter an agreement with local and state law enforcement to identify the chain of command in emergency situations.?

Wise had said his current legislation is a continuation of a school safety law that he successfully carried in 2019. The General Assembly enacted that as a response to a school shooting at Marshall County High School that killed two students and injured more than a dozen people.?

Representatives from the Kentucky chapter of Moms Demand Action spoke against the bill. The group seeks public safety measures to protect people from gun violence. One volunteer, Cathy Hobart, said she was “impressed with the care and concern” used to enact the 2019 law, but the current bill lacks the same concern behind it. He’s said his current legislation is a continuation of that policy.?

“I think that armed guards in our schools will give many people the illusion of safety, but there is no evidence that they actually provide any safety,” Hobart said. According to a report from The Trace, there are “only a handful of documented cases in which an armed security guard or stationed police officer has stopped a school shooting.”?

“And if we really want to keep our kids safe in school,” Hobart continued, “what we need to do is encourage their parents and grandparents and neighbors to lock up their guns.” Senate Bill 56, requiring safe storage of firearms and filed by Senate Democratic Floor Leader Gerald Neal, has not been given a committee hearing.?

As of Tuesday morning, Senate Bill 2 had no readings on the House floor. After a third reading, the House can vote on the legislation.?

GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

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Budget, charter schools and abortion: What to watch for as Kentucky legislature convenes https://www.academytrans.com/2023/12/29/budget-charter-schools-and-abortion-what-to-watch-for-as-kentucky-legislature-convenes/ https://www.academytrans.com/2023/12/29/budget-charter-schools-and-abortion-what-to-watch-for-as-kentucky-legislature-convenes/#respond Fri, 29 Dec 2023 10:50:38 +0000 https://www.academytrans.com/?p=13069

Lawmakers from both chambers, gathered on the floor of the House for last year's State of the Commonwealth Address, applauded first responders in the gallery, Jan. 4, 2023. (Photo for Kentucky Lantern by Arden Barnes)

Lawmakers will gather in Frankfort Jan. 2? to begin work on a state budget in a year when they will face voters at the polls.

Andy Beshear (Photo by Arden Barnes)

Gov. Andy Beshear will deliver the State of the Commonwealth Address to the General Assembly at 7/6 p.m. Wednesday, Jan. 3. The speech will be broadcast on KET and KET.org/Live.

See 2024 legislative calendar and standing committee schedule here.

The 60-day session will see the Republican-led General Assembly consider constitutional amendments to put on the November ballot, as well as pass a two-year state spending plan. It will also be the first session of Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear’s second term in office.?

All 100 seats in the House of Representatives and half the Senate will be up for election this year, meaning some lawmakers will have one last chance to pass legislation. Senate Republican Floor Leader Damon Thayer and Senate Judiciary Chairman Whitney Westerfield are among lawmakers who have announced plans to not seek reelection in 2024.?

Here are a few things to watch for during the next legislative session.?

Budget?

Beshear, a Democrat who won reelection in November, released his budget Dec. 18 in a televised address ahead of the legislative session. It was an unusual move to seemingly prevent another unusual move that happened during the 2022 legislative session. Then, House Republicans filed their own budget bill ahead of the governor’s budget address.?

Beshear is proposing a $136.6 billion spending plan for the next two years. Priorities include investments in public education, including an 11% raise for teachers and other school employees; $500 million for water and wastewater infrastructure, and fully funding the state’s expanded Medicaid program.?

However, it’s unclear what, if any, of the Democrat’s proposals will make it through the General Assembly, which has veto-proof Republican supermajorities. House Republicans will file their own budget bill when lawmakers return to Frankfort.

Chris McDaniel

Republicans approved income tax cuts in 2022 and 2023 as part of their plan to gradually eliminate Kentucky’s income tax. However, despite the record surplus, it was announced in August that state tax revenues failed to meet a benchmark set by the legislature in order to consider further income tax cuts in the 2024 session.?

At the time, Sen. Chris McDaniel, chairman of the Senate budget committee, told the Lantern Kentuckians can expect “spending restraint” that would allow for the legislature to meet the fiscal trigger in the future and cut the income tax rate again. “We do not need to spend every dollar that rolls into Frankfort,” McDaniel said. “The restraint that we will need to show will pay off when we’re able to further reduce income taxes.”

Beshear’s proposed budget doesn’t use any of the record $3.7 billion balance in the Budget Reserve Trust Fund, also known as the “rainy day” fund. A coalition of about 40 groups is calling on the state to use recurring revenue in the rainy day fund to pay for neglected needs in education, infrastructure and more.?

Beshear told reporters: “If the General Assembly decides though, based on actuarial studies, that they want to invest some of that money, depending on what they suggest I can be supportive of that. It has plenty of money for any unforeseen circumstance that we would face.”?

Charter schools, etc.

In recent years, Republican-sponsored laws aimed at funding charter schools and creating tax credits to pay for private school tuition have been struck down in court based on Kentucky’s Constitution, so it’s expected the General Assembly will pursue a “school choice” constitutional amendment during the next session

Recently, ??Franklin Circuit Court Judge Phillip Shepherd struck down a 2022 law creating a funding mechanism for charter schools in Kentucky. He wrote that charter schools are “private entities” that do not meet the Kentucky Constitution’s definition of? “public schools” or “common schools.” In December 2022, the Kentucky Supreme Court unanimously struck down a Kentucky law creating a generous tax credit to help families pay for tuition at private schools.

Jason Nemes (LRC Pubic Information)

After a Louisville Forum luncheon in December, House Republican Whip Jason Nemes told a Kentucky Lantern reporter that the legislature will “likely put that on the ballot next year for constitutional amendment,” but was unsure if there would be any specific statutory changes. Thayer, the Senate Republican floor leader, also said in a recent interview that a constitutional amendment to allow “school choice” would be among his priorities for the next session.?

Abortion exceptions?

In the 2023 governor’s race, criticism of Kentucky’s near-total abortion ban was renewed after Beshear’s campaign released ads pushing back at Republican Attorney General Daniel Cameron’s support of the laws. Cameron responded by saying that he would sign exceptions if the General Assembly passed such laws and he were elected.?

In his first press conference after the election, Beshear called on the legislature to pass exceptions to the law in cases of rape and incest. Also, in 2022, Kentucky voters rejected an amendment that would have declared there is no right to an abortion in the state Constitution.?

On election night, Nemes, who filed a bill in 2023 creating exceptions that did not advance, told the Lantern the matter deserves consideration.

“I think our people believe in the exemptions,” Nemes said. “And at some point, we’re representatives of the people, and we have to do what their demands are.”??

Anti-crime bill

A group of Louisville Republicans is backing an omnibus bill they call the Safer Kentucky Act. The draft bill has undergone several changes since they first announced their plans in September and now includes a three strikes law for violent felonies, regulating bail fund organizations, provisions to prevent “street camping,” and strengthening privileges for business employees and owners to “use a reasonable amount of force necessary” to protect themselves or prevent a person detained for theft from escaping.

Louisville Republican Rep. Jared Bauman stands at a podium backed by fellow lawmakers after presenting the Safer Kentucky Act to an interim committee. (Kentucky Lantern photo by McKenna Horsley)

The bill’s primary sponsor, Rep. Jared Bauman, said during an Interim Joint Judiciary Committee?meeting in December that constituents across Kentucky are frustrated that “??the criminal element has become an all too normal part of our world today.”?

Some provisions in the original proposal have been removed, such as establishing a Kentucky State Police post in Jefferson County and creating a statewide wiretapping law for police officers. The wiretapping proposal may become separate legislation.?

A full draft of the bill is available on the meeting materials section of the committee’s page on the Legislative Research Commission’s website.?

Removing firearms from those at risk of doing harm

Savannah Maddox (LRC Public Information)

Senate Judiciary Committee Chairman Whitney Westerfield, who has been a member of the Senate for over a decade, is working on legislation that would establish crisis aversion and rights retention orders, also known as CARR. In an Interim Joint Judiciary Committee meeting, Westerfield noted the legislation is still being drafted and welcomed input from his colleagues and stakeholders.?

The proposal seeks to temporarily remove firearms from Kentuckians at risk of harming themselves or others. Several lawmakers voiced concerns about the bill, including Rep. Savannah Maddox, R-Dry Ridge.

Maddox voiced her “long standing opposition to this proposal” and concerns that it has the potential to violate constitutional rights such as due process and protection against government search and seizure. In response, Westerfield said he was not proposing a “search” or “ransacking of a home.”?

After the meeting, Maddox said on X, formerly Twitter, that House leadership told the National Rifle Association Westerfield’s proposal “will not advance this Session.”?

GET THE MORNING HEADLINES.

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Republican backs bill to remove guns from Kentuckians at risk of hurting selves or others? https://www.academytrans.com/2023/12/15/republican-backs-bill-to-remove-guns-from-kentuckians-at-risk-of-hurting-selves-or-others/ https://www.academytrans.com/2023/12/15/republican-backs-bill-to-remove-guns-from-kentuckians-at-risk-of-hurting-selves-or-others/#respond Fri, 15 Dec 2023 19:17:51 +0000 https://www.academytrans.com/?p=12772

Whitney Westerfield (LRC Public Information)

This story mentions suicide. If you or someone you know is contemplating suicide, please call or text the National Suicide Prevention Lifeline at 988.

A Republican-backed draft bill aimed at temporarily removing firearms from Kentuckians at risk of harming themselves or others garnered mixed reactions from the Interim Joint Committee on Judiciary Friday morning.?

Sen. Whitney Westerfield, R-Fruit Hill, will introduce t?he Crisis Aversion and Rights Retention Orders bill, or CARR, in the 2024 legislative session, which begins Jan. 2. He’s motivated by shootings that left children dead and people injured.?

“The law has to allow us to protect people,” Westerfield told his colleagues Friday.??

“I feel like it’s my obligation, and though I can’t speak for you, I believe it is your obligation, to not be afraid to have difficult conversations about the toughest issues that people of Kentucky face,” he said.?

The nonprofit Whitney Strong, which works to end gun violence, says CARR generally works like this:?

  • A concerned community member brings evidence about potential harm to one’s self or others, and law enforcement can then file a legal petition to remove that person’s guns temporarily?
  • A judge will “approve or deny the temporary transfer petition after conducting a strict, independent judicial review.”?
  • Should the judge decide to grant the petition, guns belonging to the person in question are handed over temporarily to law enforcement or “a trusted person outside of the owner’s household.”?
  • A hearing is then held to determine next steps, which may include “identifying opportunities for important support services for the individual in crisis.”?
  • Once the person is not in crisis, the guns are returned.?

It’s unclear what Kentucky’s specific legislation would look like. Westerfield is working on two draft options, he said, which may “change a lot.”?

What are the two CARR options now??

One version of the bill includes the option for law enforcement to approach the person in question and tell them someone brought concerns forward about their safety or the safety of others.?

“It gives the respondent the option,” Westerfield explained. “You can have a hearing within X number of hours, near immediate. Keep your guns until then, not keep your guns — that’s up in the air. Or, you can give us your guns now, and we’ll have a hearing in a week.”?

“The respondent has the burden of defending that in that particular case,” he said. Timelines are adjustable, he added, since there may be practical problems getting a hearing so soon.??

This comes with other problems, too.?

Whitney Austin, a mass-shooting victim and advocate for a “red flag” law to protect gun owners and others, spoke during Louisville’s community vigil last week. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Abbey Cutrer)

“If you tell someone that you fear has…a mental health issue, or a trauma, something that you’re worried they’re about to break, and then you don’t act with some near immediacy, you might actually provoke the act,” Westerfield said. “That’s the concern. And you’re balancing that risk and that concern with the Second Amendment right that they have and no one disputes that they have.”??

The second version includes an ex parte hearing, which means a hearing could happen without the gun owner in the room.?

This version “still has the law enforcement steps,” Westerfield said. “So, it’s not just anybody on a whim asking for a judge to get your guns. There has to be some articulated, specific reasons” for the move.?

Whitney Austin, who co-founded Whitney Strong after surviving a mass shooting in Cincinnati, told lawmakers that “we know that misuse of firearms is not tied to law-abiding, mentally well gun owners. CARR was not created for them.”??

She added: “CARR was created to surgically identify the small subset of gun owners, including those in lawful possession of a firearm, who are on the brink of misusing their guns to harm themselves or others.”

Sheila Schuster, a licensed psychologist and the Executive Director of the KY Mental Health Coalition, told the Lantern that she supports CARR.?

At the same time, “The truth is that people with a mental illness are 10 times more likely to be a victim of violent crime than to be a perpetrator,” she said.?

“At the point that someone commits an act, particularly hurting someone else, it’s very likely that they are suffering with rage, with paranoia and in terms of feeling like somebody has done something to wrong them and they’re gonna (get) revenge,” Schuster explained.?

Additionally, Schuster said, suicidal people taking their lives happen at an “astronomical percentage higher if there’s a gun within reach than if there’s not.”?

The National Suicide Prevention Lifeline is 988.?

In a statement provided to lawmakers about the legislation, Schuster also said: “As a psychologist and mental health advocate, I am painfully aware of the stigma of mental illness and the confusion in the minds of many people that mass shooters are undoubtedly mentally ill. This is not the case and the CARR legislation does a very good job of not adding to nor reinforcing that false narrative.”?

Currently, Kentucky does have a statute that requires mental health professionals to warn potential victims if a client makes a threat to someone’s safety.?

Additionally, Kentuckians who are mentally ill and at risk of harming themselves or others and can benefit from treatment can be involuntarily hospitalized if that is “the least restrictive alternative mode of treatment presently available.”?

Richard Sanders, the Chief of Police in Jeffersontown, Kentucky, told lawmakers on behalf of CARR that police are “faced with things today that I’ve never seen before.”

“One of the biggest problems we face in law enforcement,” he said, “is people suffering from mental illness.”

Some people, he said, “shouldn’t have access to a weapon.”

‘Meaningfully different’ than ‘red flag’ laws?

Westerfield said the bill he will file is “meaningfully different in a couple of ways” from so-called “red flag” laws.?

“First of all, the timelines are shorter,” he said. “The burden of proof is going to be higher.”?

Rep. Savannah Maddox, R-Dry Ridge, reiterated her “long standing opposition to this proposal” and concern that it has the potential to violate constitutional rights such as due process and protection against government search and seizure.?

“When law enforcement comes to seize the firearms, do they automatically know where to find them?” she asked.? “Are they told where to find them? Do they dig through the entirety of the house?” She worries this could lead to a registry of some kind, she said.?

Westerfield said he isn’t proposing any kind of “search” or “ransacking of a home.”?

“I think it’s on the honor system,” he said.?

“We must fervently resist any effort to pass gun control legislation,” Maddox said. “And we must be serious about analyzing the data and putting a stop to these ineffective policies that put innocent citizens in harm’s way. And we have to encourage privately held entities to do the same.”

Rep. Pamela Stevenson, D-Louisville, said “with every right there’s a responsibility,” in comments supporting the measure.

“We’ve got to be brave enough,” she said, “to not let people just die nilly-willy.”

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Kentucky reverses loss of social workers in child and adult protective services https://www.academytrans.com/2023/06/08/kentucky-reverses-loss-of-social-workers-in-child-and-adult-protective-services/ https://www.academytrans.com/2023/06/08/kentucky-reverses-loss-of-social-workers-in-child-and-adult-protective-services/#respond Thu, 08 Jun 2023 09:40:46 +0000 https://www.academytrans.com/?p=6546

The review panel’s next review of child deaths in Kentucky comes out in February 2025. The 2024 report showed children 4 years old and younger were the most at risk for overdose. The panel also found “a significant increase” in firearm injuries in children, the Lantern previously reported. (Getty Images)

FRANKFORT – Kentucky Cabinet for Health and Family Services Secretary Eric Friedlander is “cautiously optimistic” as caseload-carrying social workers in the Department for Community Based Services increased this year.?

Eric Friedlander

In December, Kentucky had 965 workers in adult and child protective services work, which increased to 1,023 in March and 1,042 in May.?

This increase comes as the cabinet is focused on retention, Friedlander and DCBS Acting Commissioner Lesa Dennis told the Interim Joint Budget Review Subcommittee on Health and Human Services Wednesday.?

From 2017 to last summer, Friedlander told legislators, the cabinet lost social workers every month.?

Social workers undergo many challenges, Dennis and Friedlander told the committee. Those include experiencing vicarious trauma, secondary post traumatic stress and going into high-risk situations.?

Recent retention efforts include a $5 per hour pay premium for those responding to abuse and other crises after hours.?

“This is an opportunity to recognize that work and support it differently for after hours, weekends and holiday work,” Dennis said.?

Also new is discretionary leave for those who’ve undergone trauma at work. Friendlander gave the example of a social worker who had a gun put to their head on a call.?

“Our response at that point, because we didn’t have this leave, was like, ‘Sorry about that. Come back to work.’ That doesn’t help with staff retention at all,” he said. “Being able to acknowledge that trauma that folks see out there, and giving them some time to breathe is really important.”?

In July, state workers will see a 6% raise in pay. Before December 2021, Friendlander said, an entry level social worker made about $34,000 annually. That figure is now closer to $51,000.?

“We had folks serving in important positions that were eligible for our services,” he said. “And really, that shouldn’t be. And so we’re working hard to get folks out of that range of salaries. It’s ongoing work.”?

During the 2023 legislative session, Senate Bill 229 passed and was signed by Gov. Andy Beshear. It’s aimed at closing gaps in Kentucky’s child abuse reporting system, including allowing DCBS discretion to make unannounced home visits when abuse is alleged.?

Kentucky reported a decrease in child victims of abuse and neglect in 2021. Even with the improvement, there were still nearly 15,000 child victims. That’s down from 2020 (16,748), 2019 (20,130) and 2018 (23,752).

If you suspect child abuse, you can call Kentucky’s Child Abuse Hotline at 877-597-2331 or report online at https://prdweb.chfs.ky.gov/ReportAbuse/ between 8 a.m. and 4:30 p.m. Eastern Standard Time between Monday through Friday.?

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Path on Kentucky gun laws unclear weeks after Louisville shooting https://www.academytrans.com/2023/05/23/path-on-kentucky-gun-laws-unclear-weeks-after-louisville-shooting/ https://www.academytrans.com/2023/05/23/path-on-kentucky-gun-laws-unclear-weeks-after-louisville-shooting/#respond Tue, 23 May 2023 09:50:06 +0000 https://www.academytrans.com/?p=5879

From left, Gov. Andy Beshear, Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg and Dr. Jason Smith spoke to media about a mass shooting in Louisville on April 10, 2023. (Photo by Michael Swensen/Getty Images)

More than a month after two mass shootings in Louisville in a single week left seven victims dead, political leaders in Frankfort are saying little about what changes may be made to Kentucky’s gun laws.?

In April, five victims died after a 25-year-old man entered Louisville’s Old National Bank and opened fire on his coworkers with an AR-15 rifle that he had legally purchased six days before. Days later, two victims died after shots were fired into a crowd at Chickasaw Park. The tragedies moved conversations about gun violence to the forefront of Kentucky politics.?

In the aftermath, Louisville Mayor Craig Greenberg called for specific action from state leaders: Give Kentucky cities more power to create local gun regulations and change a decades-old state law that requires guns confiscated by law enforcement to be sold at public auction.?

Gov. Andy Beshear, whose friend Thomas Elliot, the bank’s senior vice president, died in the first shooting, told CNN that he has advocated for “red flag” laws, which are also known as extreme risk protection orders. Such laws temporarily restrict a person’s access to firearms if they are at immediate risk of harming others or themselves.?

Beshear did not call a special session after the Louisville shooting, unlike Tennessee Gov. Bill Lee, who ordered a special session after a school shooting in Nashville. Tennessee lawmakers will meet in August.?

Beshear is seen as a centrist on gun control and has not supported banning assault weapons.

In August 2017, while serving as attorney general, Beshear signed an amicus brief led by West Virginia Attorney General Patrick Morrisey, supporting petitioners in Kolbe v. Hogan, which challenged Maryland’s ban on semi-automatic rifles and large-capacity magazines. Other signatures include former Republican Gov. Matt Bevin who signed via his then-legal counsel, M. Stephen Pitt. The Supreme Court of the United States later refused to review the case.?

When asked about the case last week in a news conference, Beshear said he would have to review the brief before commenting. He again referenced his support of “red flag” laws, saying they respect Second Amendment rights and give law enforcement officials a needed tool. Beshear also criticized the sale of confiscated guns.?

“’Red flag’ laws have been passed in all different types of states, including ones that would be described as red or blue or otherwise,” the governor said. “And I think it is a reasonable step here, but if the General Assembly isn’t willing to talk about that yet, can’t we all agree that the family of someone murdered shouldn’t have to watch the weapon that was used auctioned off to the highest bidder? That disrespects those that have gone through so much trauma.”?

He added the state budget could cover the money police departments may get from gun sales, which is sometimes used for items like body armor.??

Beshear, who is seeking reelection this year, will face Republican Attorney General Daniel Cameron in November. In a KET debate before the May 16 primary, Cameron said he wouldn’t “support any kind of gun control.”

“The Second Amendment,” Cameron said, “is sacrosanct. We need to make sure that we protect it for Kentuckians all across the commonwealth.”

General Assembly?

David Osborne.

Recently, 16 Democratic state lawmakers proposed policies in response to gun violence in Kentucky. Their suggestions, which they plan to bring to next year’s legislative session, include a red flag law, legal responsibility to safely store a weapon and voluntary “do not sell” lists for suicidal individuals.?

In Frankfort, Republican House Speaker David Osborne told reporters recently that “active conversations” are being had with House Republicans, state senators, Louisville leaders and other interest groups and stakeholders.?

“I think that there are some things that you will see us undertake to try to address some issues in the next session,” he said. “As to what those are, I wouldn’t speculate yet.”

In the most recent legislative session, a so-called Second Amendment sanctuary bill — prohibiting law enforcement and public funds in Kentucky from being used to enforce a federal ban on guns, ammunition and firearm accessories — became law without Beshear’s signature.??

As of Monday, Kentucky has had 301 shootings in 2023, according to national nonprofit Gun Violence Archive. From those shootings, 226 victims were injured and 101 victims were killed.

Of the 301 shootings, 167 were in Louisville.

The Kentucky city with the second-highest number of shootings in that time frame was Lexington with 38.?

Reporter Liam Niemeyer contributed to this report.

Keri Foy stands with her children on April 12 in front of a memorial for those who died in a mass shooting at the Old National Bank in Louisville. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Abbey Cutrer)

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Manhunt underway in Atlanta hospital shooting that killed one and injured four https://www.academytrans.com/2023/05/03/manhunt-underway-in-atlanta-hospital-shooting-that-killed-one-and-injured-four/ https://www.academytrans.com/2023/05/03/manhunt-underway-in-atlanta-hospital-shooting-that-killed-one-and-injured-four/#respond Wed, 03 May 2023 21:29:52 +0000 https://www.academytrans.com/?p=5393

Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens holds a press conference near the scene of a Midtown Atlanta mass shooting May 3, 2023. (John McCosh/Georgia Recorder)

One person was killed and four others injured in a mass shooting at a high-rise Midtown Atlanta hospital that put Georgia’s capital city on edge and immediately sparked calls for more action on gun safety.

The shooting happened early Wednesday afternoon in a waiting room at the Northside Hospital Midtown medical center on West Peachtree Street, causing the Atlanta Police Department to urge people to shelter in place for more than two hours.

The gunman was still at large as of late Wednesday afternoon.

Atlanta Police Chief Darin Schierbaum said all of the victims were women. The victim who died was 39 years old, and those who were injured were between the ages of 25 and 71. The shooter’s motive was not immediately clear.

“The clarity that I think that we would want to know as a city and as a society, we just don’t have at this particular moment, but we’ll provide it as soon as we can,” Schierbaum said.

Four patients were being treated at Grady Hospital in downtown Atlanta. Three of them were in critical condition as of mid-afternoon Wednesday, with the fourth in stable condition, according to a hospital spokesperson.

Georgia U.S. Sen. Raphael Warnock, who said his two young children were on lockdown at school, called for more congressional action on guns in a speech on the Senate floor a few hours after the shooting.

“This happened in a medical facility, where people are trying to find healing,” Warnock said. “I want to underscore that because there have been so many mass shootings – in fact, about one every day in this country this year – that, tragically, we act as if this is routine. We behave as if this is normal.

“It is not normal. It is not right for us to live in a nation where nobody is safe, no matter where they are,” he said, rattling off the long list of places where mass shootings have happened. “And still we have done so very little in this building.”

Congress passed modest gun safety legislation last year in the wake of a mass shooting at an elementary school in Texas that killed 19 children and two adults. It was the first major gun safety legislation passed in three decades.

“It was a significant piece of legislation, but obviously, it’s not enough,” Warnock said, decrying the resistance to universal background checks.

Under the Gold Dome, lawmakers have eased gun laws in recent years. Last year, Gov. Brian Kemp signed into a law a measure that ended the requirement for a permit to carry a firearm in public.

Schierbaum said police are searching for a suspect, 24-year-old Deion Patterson.

Police believe Patterson carjacked a vehicle near the hospital and fled before law enforcement arrived, Schierbaum said. By the afternoon, the search for Patterson had expanded into southern Cobb County.

“We have a multijurisdictional effort underway to bring this individual to justice and ensure that we remove him from the street. Everyone should consider him still armed and presenting a danger to whatever community he may find himself in at this time.”

Atlanta Mayor Andre Dickens said his office has been contacted by the White House for support.

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Prayers and reform: Politicians react to Louisville shooting https://www.academytrans.com/2023/04/10/prayers-and-reform-politicians-react-to-louisville-shooting/ https://www.academytrans.com/2023/04/10/prayers-and-reform-politicians-react-to-louisville-shooting/#respond Mon, 10 Apr 2023 20:49:05 +0000 https://www.academytrans.com/?p=4464

First responders gathered the morning of April 10 in downtown Louisville near the scene of a mass shooting at Old National Bank near Slugger Field. (Kentucky Lantern photo by Liam Niemeyer)

LOUISVILLE —?After news of a shooting in downtown Louisville broke Monday, Kentucky politicians quickly reacted to share their thoughts.?

Some called for thoughts and prayers for victims, their families and others responding to the incidents, while others made pleas for more gun control laws.?

Five people died, including the shooter, during the shooting at Old National Bank. Nine were taken to the University of Louisville hospital to be treated for injuries.

Late Monday, the Democrats who represent Louisville in the Kentucky legislature called for “real change” and promised to bring “communities together to talk about commonsense policies that would save lives.” Here is their statement:

“This morning, our city experienced a devastating loss of life to senseless gun violence. We hold the grieving families in our hearts, along with the brave first responders who put their lives on the line today and every day.?Losing mothers and fathers, sons and daughters, to gun violence has become commonplace everywhere in our nation, but we cannot allow it to become normalized.?This is not a tragedy that happened just to Louisville. These tragedies are happening everywhere in Kentucky, every single day and in every single county.

“As legislators, we owe it to the people in our districts to have real conversations about what each of us will do differently to stop these preventable deaths in our communities.?What happened today was a symptom of a much larger epidemic. And while we know that this is a moment when our community needs to come together and heal, we also know that this does not have to be our reality moving forward.?Over the coming weeks and months, we will be bringing communities together to talk about commonsense policies that would save lives. We will build a platform for real change for every Kentuckian. We commit to working with anyone who is willing to work in the best interests of the people of Kentucky.

“We will not forget the profound loss of this day, and we call on our constituents and our colleagues to help us end this scourge in our Commonwealth.”

Democratic Gov. Andy Beshear traveled to the city Monday morning.?

https://twitter.com/GovAndyBeshear/status/1645469395185958923?s=20

Others seeking to become Kentucky’s next governor also released statements.?

https://twitter.com/kyoag/status/1645487181333495808?s=20

https://twitter.com/RyanQuarlesKY/status/1645433818944249858?s=20

https://twitter.com/KellyCraftKY/status/1645440728326103045?s=20

https://twitter.com/KeckForKY/status/1645458644316585985?s=20

State lawmakers who represent Louisville also commented on the incidents.

https://twitter.com/KeturahHerron/status/1645432616043139075?s=20

https://twitter.com/grossberg4ky/status/1645514998335021057?s=20

https://twitter.com/PamForAG/status/1645465913771139073?s=20

https://twitter.com/DavidYatesKY37/status/1645467185643507712?s=20

https://twitter.com/KYSenateDems/status/1645457788825419779?s=20

Leadership in both the Kentucky House of Representatives and Senate commented on the Louisville shootings.

“This morning’s attacks in Louisville are heartbreaking as lives are shattered by a senseless act of violence,” said Republican House Speaker David Osborne. “We mourn the loss of innocent life and hold those wounded in prayer as we do the families of both. As details continue to unfold, we also offer our appreciation to the men and women of the Louisville Metro Police Department for their response surely saved countless other lives.”

“After another senseless act of violence, the Senate stands firmly with the City of Louisville,” said Republican Senate President Robert Stivers. “During this tragic time, we will hold the victims’ loved ones and friends in our prayers. I commend law enforcement who rushed to the scene, placed themselves in the line of fire to protect the public, and ended an obviously deranged individual’s shooting spree. If not for these heroes, even more families and friends would be mourning today.”

Kentucky House Democratic Caucus Leaders Reps. Derrick Graham, Cherlynn Stevenson and Rachel Roberts said the following: ““We are beyond devastated by what happened in Louisville this morning as we and our nation endure not one but two shooting sprees in a span of hours.? We mourn for the victims who were senselessly killed or wounded and pray for them and their loved ones.? We also want to praise the decisive action and bravery of law enforcement that undoubtedly saved lives.? More broadly, though, we should not have to live like this – living in fear and in a time where legislative inaction regarding gun violence has become the law of the land.? We must demand more.”

Members of Kentucky’s congressional delegation also issued statements on Monday.

https://twitter.com/LeaderMcConnell/status/1645442626584297475?s=20

https://twitter.com/RandPaul/status/1645443284486037504?s=20

https://twitter.com/RepMcGarvey/status/1645453289880793091?s=20

President Joe Biden called on Republicans to act. Vice President Kamala Harris also issued a statement.

https://twitter.com/POTUS/status/1645469188813619209?s=20

https://twitter.com/VP/status/1645492923650252819?s=20

Both the Republican Party of Kentucky and the Kentucky Democratic Party released statements on social media following Monday’s shootings.

https://twitter.com/KyDems/status/1645477806376091660?s=20

https://twitter.com/KYGOP/status/1645458255357915137?s=20

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Kentucky students recommend ways to prevent, respond to school shootings https://www.academytrans.com/2023/01/24/kentucky-students-recommend-ways-to-prevent-respond-to-school-shootings/ https://www.academytrans.com/2023/01/24/kentucky-students-recommend-ways-to-prevent-respond-to-school-shootings/#respond Tue, 24 Jan 2023 22:17:30 +0000 https://www.academytrans.com/?p=1886

Members of the Commissioner’s Student Advisory Council give a presentation on school safety measures after researching the topic and policy recommendations. (Photo for the Kentucky Lantern by McKenna Horsley)

FRANKFORT — After a gunman killed 21 people and wounded 17 others at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas, last spring, high school students on a Kentucky advisory committee “realized we needed to use our voices to change,” said Malley Taylor, a junior at the Craft Academy in Morehead.

On Tuesday, the students presented their recommendations as the chair of the Kentucky House Education Committee, Rep. James Tipton, R-Taylorsville, listened.

Members of the Commissioner’s Student Advisory Council Peter Jefferson, left, and Joud Dahleh talk to reporters’ after the council’s
presentation on school safety measures. (Photo for the Kentucky Lantern by McKenna Horsley)

The Commissioner’s Student Advisory Council, a group of about 30 students from across the state, identified areas where current measures could be improved, such as strengthening active shooting drills and communication with parents and students. They also called for promoting and supporting “gun control legislation that would make it harder for an active shooter/assailant incident in the first place.”

Kentucky Education Commissioner Jason Glass addresses reporters’ after a student advisory council’s
presentation on school safety measures. (Photo for the Kentucky Lantern by McKenna Horsley)

The students advise Education Commissioner Jason Glass, who said to media after the event that he was optimistic the legislature would take students’ recommendations into consideration. The perspective of students and their voices is important in conversations about school safety, he said. “They are the ones that are under the threat of this on a regular basis.”

According to the Gun Violence Archive, the U.S. has had 39 mass shootings since New Year’s Day. The nonprofit organization tracks data about gun violence across the country.?

Taylor said the group was divided into three subgroups to gather information about recommendations on how gun violence should be addressed before, during and after crises occur.?

The students released a full report of of their findings: the highlights were:?

Before

  • Promote how to use the STOP tipline, which is an anonymous reporting tool, in Kentucky schools.?
  • Improve the rate of intervention in concerning behaviors.?
  • Promote and support gun legislation that would make it harder for an active shooter/assailant incident to occur, including strengthening background checks.?

During

  • Improve the quality of active shooter drills and enforce existing requirements for them.?
  • Improve the training for staff, school resource officers and first responders to ensure quick response times to incidents.?
  • Create a clear notification system to contact students and parents about an event.?

After

  • Provide access to mental health support, including therapy sessions and other mental health professionals.?
  • Host town-hall style meetings in the community.?
  • Repair and rebuild the school building.?
James Tipton

Tipton, the House Education chair, thanked the students for taking their research seriously and promised that he would read it entirely and bring it back to the legislature. He recalled when he and other lawmakers first learned of the 2018 shooting at Marshall County High School during a House Education Committee meeting. A gunman killed two students and injured 14 people. The fifth-year anniversary of the tragedy was Monday.?

After the shooting, the Kentucky legislature passed the School Safety and Resiliency Act in 2019.? “We’ve already made some great strides there but that does not mean we need to be complacent,” Tipton said. “We need to continue to look at this, we need to continue to study, we need to continue to learn when these unfortunate situations happen,” the chairman said.?

To reporters, Tipton said improving school safety through the addition of metal detectors, bullet resistant glass, more school resource officers and supporting mental health and school counseling programs requires funding.

When asked about inclusion of gun control legislation in the students’ presentation, Tipton called it “a polarizing issue.” As a gun owner himself, he said others should be responsible with ownership.?

“I think it’s something we need to continue to look at and study and evaluate. I don’t know what the probability of getting something like that passed here in Kentucky (is) … It would be something that would be very difficult but I think we still need to examine that issue,” Tipton said.?

Peter Jefferson, a sophomore from Henry Clay High School in Lexington, told reporters that while feeling anxious about a possible school shooting is not constant, it’s something he and his peers are conscious of. Joud Dahleh, a junior at Ignite Institute in Boone County, agreed that it is not a day-to-day focus, but her classmates have had conversations with each other and teachers about it.?

“My school is mostly glass so we walk around sometimes and just wonder how safe we would be if that were to occur,” Dahleh said.

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