Armed Guardian Measure Protecting College Campuses Advances

Shooting At Florida State University Leaves 2 Dead And Multiple Injured

TALLAHASSEE, FLORIDA - APRIL 17: Police investigate the scene of a shooting near the student union at Florida State University on April 17, 2025 in Tallahassee, Florida. According to reports, two people were killed and several others injured when the alleged shooter, believed to be a current student and the son of a Leon County sheriff's deputy, opened fire on the university's main campus. (Photo by Miguel J. Rodriguez Carrillo/Getty Images)Photo: Miguel J. Rodriguez Carrillo / Getty Images News / Getty Images

UPDATE: (Tallahassee, FL) - A bill hardening Florida college campuses against mass shooters passing the House Education & Employment Committee unanimously Tuesday.

State Rep. Michelle Salzman says her bill, HB 757, is in response to the mass shooting last year on the FSU campus.

Rep. says the measure allows trained university staff to carry a gun. FSU professor Emily Stewart, who survived last year's mass shooting, opposes the bill. She's concerned that in the confusion, an armed professor who steps out into the hallway could be shot be officers thinking it's the mass shooter.

Rep. Salzman says her bill mirrors the law passed after the Margory Stoneman Douglas mass shooting. She says the public-school guardian program passed after the Parkland shooting has been 100-percent successful with no accidental shootings of staff by law enforcement at public schools.

Despite the opposition, HB 757, that would allow trained college professors to carry a weapon was passed unanimously advanced today.

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(Tallahassee, FL) - Florida lawmakers advanced a bill Tuesday that hardens college and university campuses against an active shooter.

The bill is an extension of a 2018 law, post Parkland, requiring every public school in Florida to have armed law enforcement, or armed guardian on campus.

State Rep. Michelle Salzman says her bill, HB 757, is in response to the mass shooting last year on the FSU campus that killed two and injured six.

The active shooter college safety measure would allow trained individuals to carry a weapon, require a campus rapid alert system that communicates with law enforcement, and reunification plans for parents to find their kids.

In addition to armed guardians, anyone who shoots a weapon within one thousand feet of a school would be charged with a felony and held without bond. It also requires students and teachers to take active shooter preparedness training.

Democrat Rep. Michael Gottlieb says he was skeptical about arming eligible teachers but finds that the bill does the right thing.

A companion school safety bill, SB 896, is making its way through the state senate.


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