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Thursday, which would have been the last day of classes for the school year in Uvalde, is instead another day of intense grief and mourning following a mass shooting Tuesday that left 19 children and two teachers dead at Robb Elementary School.
There have been eight mass shootings in Texas in the past 13 years, as The Texas Tribune has noted, yet lawmakers have steadily loosed restrictions on firearms over that same period.
Shortly after a school shooting four years ago at Sante Fe High School in Sante Fe, Texas, left 10 people dead, Gov. Greg Abbott put forth a 40-page list of safety recommendations, said Corbett Smith, an education reporter for The Dallas Morning News. During the 2019 legislative session, those recommendations became Senate Bill 11, the largest bill to set a per-student allotment for student safety.
“It required schools to submit an emergency operations plan to the nexus of state safety in schools, which is, you know, at Texas State, it’s the Texas School Safety Center,” Smith said. “It required schools to create threat assessment teams, which was kind of a unique concept where a group of people at school would identify students that were having emotional problems and try to give them guidance and have possible intervention.”
But lawmakers did very little in addressing gun safety and gun laws in the state after the Sante Fe shooting. Read more.