Walking in the Footsteps of a Tragedy
January 01, 2024
President's Corner
In February 2018, 14 students
and three staff members were murdered in the freshman building at Marjory
Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla. This past October, I was invited
to tour the school as part of a guided visitation led by the district
attorney鈥檚 office.
Almost six years after the tragedy, the building remained frozen in time 鈥 preserved as a crime scene until recent visits by a court jury, victims鈥 families and those involved in a reenactment as part of a civil lawsuit.
The scene was haunting and heartbreaking. There was blood on doors, walls and desks. Broken glass and personal effects were scattered across the classrooms. The sights of that day will stay with me for the rest of my life 鈥 long after the building is demolished this summer.
There is something wrong when we allow this carnage to continue with such frequency and little preventive action, when people offer only their thoughts and prayers, saying it is 鈥渢oo soon鈥 to discuss solutions out of respect for the victims.
This is a public health epidemic such as we鈥檝e never seen before in our schools and in our country. The K-12 School Shooting Database reports that shooting incidents on school grounds increased from 20 in 2012 to more than 305 in 2022.
According to the Centers for Disease Control, gun violence now is the leading cause of death among America鈥檚 young people. The Gun Violence Archive states that, as of October, more than 1,300 children and teens had been killed by guns in 2023. Moreover, The Washington Post reported that more than 1,150 guns were brought to K-12 campuses nationwide last year but seized before anyone fired them.
According to a study by the U.S. Secret Service and U.S. Department of Education, nearly every school shooting is planned. Eighty percent of school shooters tell someone about their plans, but too often, people think they鈥檙e joking 鈥 the theme of the incredibly powerful 鈥淛ust Joking鈥 Sandy Hook Promise public service announcement.
Just one month after the Parkland shooting, tens of thousands of students walked out of their schools for 17 minutes in response to safety concerns and in memory of the victims. Another 1.2 million marched on Washington, D.C., and elsewhere weeks later.
These events demonstrated the leadership and activism of young people who exercised their Constitutional rights to free speech and peaceful assembly to bring national attention to the national problem of gun violence 鈥 and yet they were criticized then and still are to this day as kids who don鈥檛 know what they are talking about.
Many of today鈥檚 students live in fear. When you hear about the prospect of a 鈥済ood guy with a gun鈥 preventing a tragedy or even the notion of arming our teachers, remember that shootings have happened in schools with police or resource officers on site. Parkland is a poignant reminder.
We need solutions. Yes, we need legislation. We also need to ensure that appropriate mental health supports are available and accessible to our students. Furthermore, we need more common sense when it comes to gun violence and school safety.
Max Schachter, father of a Parkland victim, coordinated our visit to Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School. I encourage you to read the essay he wrote for the 鈥淭oday鈥 show website (https://bit.ly/parkland-parent-essay) after he visited the classroom where his son Alex was murdered. He has dedicated his life to school safety, creating Safe Schools for Alex (safe鈥媠chools鈥媐oralex.org) and a charity in his memory.
Like Max, I see the value of leaders walking through these horrific crime scenes to learn and better understand the consequences of inaction 鈥 namely, the premature death of far too many young people and the fear instilled in countless others.
Schools must be safe places for our students.
Gladys Cruz is 91制片 president in 2023-24.
Author
Award
This article was the recipient of the 2024 Award of Merit for Excellence in Writing, awarded by the National School Public Relations Association (NSPRA).

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