GOP Lawmakers In Ohio Pass Bill Allowing Teachers, Staff To Carry Guns In Schools

An Ohio bill allowing teachers and other school staff to carry guns in schools with reduced training is on its way to Gov. Mike DeWine’s desk.

On the heels of a mass shooting at a Texas elementary school that left 21 people dead, the bill was fast-tracked through the Statehouse Wednesday, with the Senate voting 23-9 in favor of the bill, and the House approving it just hours later with a 56-34 vote, with nine abstentions.

The bill, House Bill 99, allows any adult in a public or private school to carry a concealed firearm in a school’s safety zone if a district chooses to do so without the 737 hours of peace officer training required by current law.

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Thomas Hall (R-Madison Township), passed the House in November with a 59-33 vote but was returned to the House for a concurrence vote after the Senate’s passage.

DeWine said in late May that he asked the Ohio General Assembly to pass the bill to implement “adequate, scenario-based training” for education staff.

After the bill passed through the legislature, DeWine issued the following statement:

“Last week I called on the General Assembly to pass a bill that would allow local school districts, if they so chose, to designate armed staff for school security and safety. My office worked with the General Assembly to remove hundreds of hours of curriculum irrelevant to school safety and to ensure training requirements were specific to a school environment and contained significant scenario-based training. House Bill 99 accomplishes these goals, and I thank the General Assembly for passing this bill to protect Ohio children and teachers. I look forward to signing this important legislation.

At a hearing before the Senate Veterans and Public Safety Committee Tuesday, the overwhelming majority of speakers who testified spoke in opposition of the bill, including many individual teachers and representatives from the Ohio Fraternal Order of Police and Ohio Federation of Teachers.

“Asking teachers who are already overburdened to add more to their plate by serving in a dual role where they’re both responsible for educating children and now in some cases where this might be implemented for armed security in schools, we think is not really addressing the issue,” Ohio Education Association President Scott DiMauro said.

Proponents of the bill, like Rob Sexton, legislative affairs director for the Buckeye Firearms Association, said there’s an element of local decision, as individual school districts are able to decide whether to allow certain staff to be armed. allowing local school districts to decide whether to allow certain staff to be armed

“For me, I think it gets down to this: Do we want our kids to have a fighting chance in the event that the worst happens, right? And for us, we’d just like a school to be able to have that option. Allows local school districts to make their own decisions,” Sexton said.

 

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