According to a poll following the Uvalde shooting, two in three American parents are concerned about the possibility of gun violence at their children's school.
As parents prepare to send their children back to school across the country three months after the massacre of 19 students and two teachers at Robb Elementary in Uvalde, Texas, many fear for their kids' safety.following the Uvalde shooting, two in three American parents are concerned about the possibility of gun violence at their children's school.
People visit a makeshift memorial to the victims of the shooting at Robb Elementary in Uvalde, on June 30. “We have these incidents, and then they end and then we seem to go about our business. But parents have been concerned for a long, long time. ... We've got parents from Sandy Hook, parents from Columbine, parents from here in Uvalde. That will not and have not stopped. They are concerned because these are their babies. These are their children,” Chapin said.Max Schachter is one of many parents who are still fighting for school safety.
, an organization that provides resources for students, parents and law enforcement. “That's my mission. That's why I travel around the country. ... I speak about the lessons that we learned in Parkland, I talk about what happened, but it's complacency. They never thought it was going to happen in Uvalde. But it did,” Schachter said.Marion County police officers stand in front of Forest High School after a school shooting on April 20, 2018, in Ocala, Fla.
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