Texas wanted armed officers at every school after Uvalde. Many can't meet that standard
Source: Associated Press
Texas wanted armed officers at every school after Uvalde. Many cant meet that standard
BY PAUL J. WEBER, ACACIA CORONADO AND KENDRIA LAFLEUR
Updated 4:20 PM EDT, September 1, 2023
AUSTIN, Texas (AP) A vision of armed officers at every school in Texas is crashing into the reality of not enough money or police as a new mandate took effect Friday, showing how a goal more states are embracing in response to Americas cycle of mass killings is proving unworkable in many communities.
Dozens of Texas largest school districts, which educate many of the states 5 million students, are reopening classrooms without meeting the states new requirements of armed officers on every campus. The mandate is a pillar of a safety bill signed by Republican Gov. Greg Abbott, who rejected calls this year for gun control despite angry pleas from parents of children killed in the Uvalde school massacre.
Texas has nearly 9,000 public school campuses, second only to California, making the requirement the largest of its kind in the U.S.
We all support the idea, said Stephanie Elizalde, superintendent of the Dallas Independent School District, which has more than 140,000 students. The biggest challenge for all superintendents is that this is yet again an unfunded mandate.
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Read more: https://apnews.com/article/texas-schools-police-mandate-budget-guns-9a68ff8935fa376965ad754056de1673