A high level of stress, anxiety, fear, worry, and anger remains in the community of Newtown, Connecticut, in the more than two years that have passed when a gunman shot and killed 20 first-graders and six educators at Sandy Hook Elementary School, a new survey found.
Some of the respondents who are predominantly outside of the school have persistent feelings of guilt, reluctance to discuss how the tragedy has impacted them, and lack awareness of services available in the community to assist, according to the survey, which was released Wednesday by the Newtown-Sandy Hook Community Foundation. As the data confirms, such feelings create a level of suffering in silence or guilt by individuals who don’t feel as if they should be struggling or have a right to reach out for help because they weren’t as directly impacted as someone else.
But the majority of respondents reported feeling that the community is strong and moving in a positive direction, and that there are opportunities to connect and participate in volunteer activities, according to the data.
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The foundation conducted the anonymous community-wide survey between Jan. 22 and Feb. 13, and generated 999 responses. Besides the foundation’s internal lists, members distributed the survey through the community of Newtown, the Newtown Public School District, and The Newtown Bee, the local newspaper.









