17 died a week ago; survivors join town hall to say #NeverAgain

With the sound of gunshots still fresh in their minds, survivors of a school shooting in Parkland, Florida, are raising their voices at a town hall hosted by CNN, hoping politicians will hear their pleas for new laws that will make them safer.

Thousands of people are attending the town hall, which follows days of sit-ins, walkouts and demonstrations in solidarity with survivors of the massacre that took 17 lives on Valentine’s Day.

The shooting reignited the passionate national discussion on gun laws and how to keep communities safe, catalyzing a protest movement led by the young students from Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School.

“This is the time to talk about it. We’ve gone through the stages of grief,” Ashley Paseltiner, 16, said before the two-hour event began.

Broward County Sheriff Scott Israel will join the panel.

Before the event, he addressed the crowd in the arena and said, “My generation, we did not get it done. You will get it done.”

Robert Runcie, the school system superintendent, told the audience the students at Stoneman Douglas have started a movement.

“These are the young people that are going to change the world for the better. And let me tell you, our students are ready for this moment. They have been preparing for this moment,” he said.

Runcie added that while some have called for teachers to be armed, they should be armed with better salaries.

Some of the student participants came straight from the state capitol in Tallahassee after lobbying state lawmakers for tougher restrictions on weapons like the one used to kill their friends and teachers.

Both Florida US senators, Bill Nelson and Marco Rubio, and Rep. Ted Deutch are at the event. National Rifle Association spokeswoman Dana Loesch is also taking part.

President Donald Trump and Gov. Rick Scott declined to attend or appear by video.

Scott said he would be working on legislative solutions in Tallahassee. On Tuesday, he held a roundtable discussion on school safety and gun policy with state leaders and was set to meet with students Wednesday.

Trump held a listening session at the White House with those affected by some of the nation’s highest-profile deadly school shootings, from Columbine High School to Marjory Stoneman Douglas.

The President pledged to go to work after the meeting ended. “We don’t want others to go through the kind of pain you have gone through. It wouldn’t be right,” he said.

Meadow Pollack’s father, Andrew Pollack, saidhe was speaking Wednesday because his daughter couldn’t.

“We as a country failed our children,” he said.

Calls for compromise

Some participants will come straight from the state capitol in Tallahassee after lobbying lawmakers for tougher restrictions on weapons like the one used to kill their friends and teachers.

Some students said Wednesday they blamed lawmakers for putting the gun in the shooter’s hands through what they described as lax gun laws.

“We were there. We heard the gunshots, we had to walk over the dead bodies,” said 15-year-old Nadia Murillo. She implored lawmakers to heed their calls for tougher gun laws.

“Please listen to us. We just never want this to happen again,” she said. “You need to listen to us because we are the future and we know what we want.”

Senior Jack Haimowitz, 18, said change will only come when people from both sides of the gun debate come together with the goal of compromise.

“Instead of viewing the issue for solving this as a two-headed monster in which conservative ideas and liberal ideas are the only two individual answers, we have to meld them,” he said.

“We have to maybe take the bullets out of the gun as well as putting on the vest and we have to make it harder for the shooter to get the guns, from the liberal perspective, as well as potentially putting in metal detectors in the schools so we can honor the conservative perspective.”

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