Texas Governor Signs Bill Allowing More Armed Teachers

Texas Governor Signs Bill Allowing More Armed Teachers
The Texas Capitol building in Austin on Oct. 29, 2014. (Dan Istitene/Getty Images)
The Associated Press
6/7/2019
Updated:
6/7/2019

Texas will allow more teachers to have guns in school and increase mental health services for students under bills that Gov. Greg Abbott signed into law June 6, as major parts of the state’s response to a 2018 mass shooting at a high school near Houston.

School districts will be allowed to place as many armed teachers or school personnel on campus as they see fit. The new laws also are designed to put more mental health counselors on campus, train teachers to recognize mental health problems and create “threat assessment teams” to help identify potentially dangerous students.

“We are proud to have responded to one of the most horrific days in the state of Texas,” the Republican governor said of the shooting at Santa Fe High School, in which eight students and two teachers were killed. “We can never erase the pain that this tragedy caused, but we can act to make our schools safer.”

Lawmakers also approved separate measures to “harden” campuses with metal detectors, vehicle barriers, new security doors, shooter alarm systems, and other means. Abbott called school safety one of his top priorities for this year.

Texas isn’t alone in its push to arm more educators. Florida recently approved increasing the number of armed teachers, in response to the February 2018 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland that left 17 people dead.
Gun rights advocates say the added marshals will save lives. But teachers groups, gun control activists, and some parents worry that more guns on campus could lead to lethal accidents.

The Texas State Teachers Association lauded the boost in mental health services and training but opposed expanding the marshal program.

“Teachers are trained to teach and to nurture, not double up as security guards,” union spokesman Clay Robison said.

It’s unclear how many school marshals—the term used to describe school workers who go through “school marshal” training—will be added by the next school year. The program is voluntary and marshals must be approved by their local school districts for the 80 hours of training, which includes “active shooter” scenarios. The governor’s office didn’t immediately provide an estimate for how many it expects will be certified for the 2019-2020 school year.

Texas had fewer than 40 school marshals throughout its more than 1,000 public school districts in early 2018. Applications rose sharply after the Santa Fe attack, which authorities blame on a student at the school who faces charges, and the number of school marshals rose to nearly 200 by the close of the school year that just ended.

Previous law limited the number of school marshals to one per 200 students or one per building and the new law removes that cap. Marshals will still have to keep their guns locked away from students. A separate effort to allow marshals to carry concealed weapons on them in school didn’t pass.

Rusty Norman, president of the Santa Fe school board, said his district is still undecided on whether to put armed school marshals on campus.

“After the community suffered the tragedy we suffered, people are willing to look at all aspects of safety, and that’s just one additional thing that does make people safer,” Norman said.