The Sandy Hook Advisory Committee delivered its final report to Gov. Dannel Malloy on Friday with 94 recommendations on how to prevent another mass shooting like that of the 2012 massacre in Newtown, Connecticut. The 277-page report focused on three areas: safe school design and operation; law enforcement, public safety, and emergency response; and mental health and wellness.
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Members held dozens of hearings and received public testimony from at least 100 witnesses and experts in the areas addressed. The final document included slight revisions from the draft released in February.
“The Commission was not intended to be an investigatory body. It was not intended to tell the story of what happened on December 14, 2012 with academic rigor and forensic precision,” the report says. “It was not intended to cast a bright light on A.L., and in doing so, make the incomprehensible act somehow comprehensible. It was not assigned financial resources.”
Malloy created the 16-member panel in the wake of the tragedy on Dec. 14, 2012, when a gunman opened fire inside Sandy Hook Elementary School and killed 20 first-graders and six educators. For more than two years, the group reviewed current policies in Connecticut pertaining to the areas of public safety, particularly focusing on school safety, gun-violence prevention and mental health. The members’ mission was to change policies and laws in an effort to prevent another mass shooting.
During the last meeting Friday in Hartford, panelist Wayne Sandford said it’s only a matter of time until another shooting occurs in Connecticut. Other members echoed Sandford’s sentiment and urged leaders to consider the report in its entirety.
State legislators already have put into law some of the suggestions recommended by the panel, such as requiring mandatory background checks on all commercial gun sales and transfers, including unlicensed dealers, in Connecticut.
Below are some of the recommendations:
School safety
- Create a safety committee to include police, first responders, teachers, administrators and custodians.
- All exterior doors in elementary, middle and high schools should be equipped with hardware capable of implementing a full perimeter lockdown.
- Additional safety standards should be studied and implemented concerning the issuance of classroom keys to substitute teachers.
- Custodians, who are typically well-versed on the physical school building and grounds, should be included as members of security and safety committees.
- Teachers, administrators and custodians should be appointed to school security and safety committees.
- Each school should provide safety and security training for faculty, staff and students on how to respond to hazards and other events.
Law enforcement
- The amount of ammunition that can be purchased at a given time should be limited.
- Ammunition purchases should only be allowed for registered users.
- Registration should be required for every firearm, and should be issued after completion of a background check. This is separate from a permit to carry a firearm.
- Firearms permits should be renewed on a regular basis, and include a test of weapon-handling capacity, as well as an understanding of applicable laws and regulations.
Mental health









