Ohio Republicans responded to last week’s elementary school massacre in Uvalde, Texas, with a bill that would make it easier for teachers to strap up. And many teachers and cops in the state hate the idea. Ideally, when you’re creating a policy meant to combat gun violence in schools, you hope for widespread buy-in from groups that will be responsible for acting on the policy in the event of a shooting: teachers and cops. That’s not the case in Ohio.
After a gunman armed with a semi-automatic rifle mowed down 19 kids and two teachers at Robb Elementary last week, conservatives proposed everything from prayer in schools to limiting the number of doors a school should have. In other words, anything but making it harder for would-be killers to get guns. That includes the Ohio bill that passed in the state Senate on Wednesday, which significantly reduces the amount of training a teacher needs to be authorized to carry a gun on campus.
If signed, the bill will overrule an opinion handed down by the Ohio Supreme Court last year requiring teachers to receive the same amount of training — at least 60 hours — police receive to be cleared to carry. The new law would require up to only 24 hours of similar training for teachers. And Ohio Gov. Mike DeWine, a Republican, is going to sign it.
“My office worked with the General Assembly to remove hundreds of hours of curriculum irrelevant to school safety and to ensure training requirements were specific to a school environment and contained significant scenario-based training,” he said in a statement to a local CBS affiliate Thursday, adding that he looks forward to signing the bill.
On Thursday, presidents of the top education worker unions in the state — the Ohio Education Alliance and the Ohio Federation of Teachers — issued a joint statement calling for DeWine to veto the bill.









