House backs 1st school safety bill by 407-10 vote

Measure OKs $500M grants

Rep. John Rutherford, flanked by Reps. Mike Bost (left) and Kevin McCarthy, talks about his school-safety bill Wednesday. The bill is one of two in a White House plan to combat school shootings.
Rep. John Rutherford, flanked by Reps. Mike Bost (left) and Kevin McCarthy, talks about his school-safety bill Wednesday. The bill is one of two in a White House plan to combat school shootings.

WASHINGTON -- The House overwhelmingly approved a bill to improve school safety Wednesday, the first gun-related action by Congress since the shooting that left 17 people dead at a Florida high school.

The bill authorizes $500 million over 10 years for grants to improve training and coordination between schools and local law enforcement and help identify signs of potential violence before they occur.

Lawmakers approved the bill, 407-10. It now goes to the Senate, where a similar measure is being considered.

House Speaker Paul Ryan, R-Wis., said the bill "provides a multilayered approach" to identify threats so authorities can stop violence before it occurs.

"Tragic violence has no place in our schools. Every American believes that," Ryan said. "This legislation will actually take concrete action to prevent that."

The vote came as the FBI announced it is doubling the number of supervisors assigned to review tips received from the public about possible threats of mass shootings or other violence.

Deputy FBI Director David Bowdich told a Senate committee that the agency "could have and should have done more" to investigate information it received before the Feb. 14 massacre at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla.

The FBI received at least two credible tips that the suspect in the Florida school shooting had a "desire to kill" and access to guns and could be plotting an attack, but agents failed to investigate, he said Wednesday at a Senate Judiciary Committee hearing.

"While we will never know if any such investigative activity would have prevented this tragedy, we clearly should have done more," Bowdich said.

The Senate panel was considering a similar proposal to improve school safety, but the hearing focused on law enforcement failures in Florida. Besides the FBI lapses, Broward County, Fla., Sheriff Scott Israel has said his office received more than 20 calls about accused gunman Nikolas Cruz in the past few years.

Lawmakers made clear their dismay, although they offered no clear solutions.

"It's my impression that the man did everything but take out an ad in the paper saying 'I'm going to kill someone,'" said Sen. Lindsey Graham, R-S.C.

Sen. Charles Grassley, the Republican chairman of the committee, noted that Israel declined an invitation to testify Wednesday, as did Michael Carroll, secretary of Florida's Department of Children and Families.

"By thumbing their noses at Congress, Sheriff Israel and Secretary Carroll have let the American people down and also the citizens of Florida they serve," said Grassley, R-Iowa.

Some Democratic lawmakers sought to expand the focus to include gun control. Sen. Dianne Feinstein, D-Calif., said more and more families are being victimized by mass shootings since a ban on certain semi-automatic weapons she wrote expired in 2004.

"This Congress cannot continue to do nothing, because nothing means more lives are lost, including the youngest and the most vulnerable among us," said Feinstein, the senior Democrat on the Judiciary panel. "High school students are literally begging us to take action to get these guns off the streets and out of our schools."

As Feinstein spoke, hundreds of students were rallying outside the Capitol to urge stricter gun control laws. The rally was part of a nationwide school walkout to protest gun-violence after the Florida attack. A larger rally is planned March 24.

Chloe Appel, 15, of Gaithersburg, Md., held a sign that said, "Fix this before I text my mom from under a desk." The high school student said she's hopeful that Congress will enact gun-control laws.

"After today and after the next protest Congress will see how many people feel strongly about this so they will have to make a change," she said.

Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., told the students that young people again are leading the nation, as they did during the civil-rights and anti-war movements.

"All across the country people are sick and tired of gun violence, and the time is now for all of us together to stand up to the NRA and pass common-sense gun legislation," Sanders said, referring to the National Rifle Association, a powerful gun lobby, by its initials.

The hearing itself was packed with gun-control activists who cheered calls for stiffer gun laws and expressed frustration that none appeared likely to pass.

"A lot of talk and not a lot of action," said Trish Petty, who wore a red T-shirt from the group Moms Demand Action. The NRA "still has a huge stranglehold on the people up there asking questions," she said.

The FBI has acknowledged it mishandled separate tips related to Cruz, in September and again in January.

"When we make mistakes, we will not hide them," Bowdich said, vowing to work with Congress to correct mistakes and prevent similar tragedies.

President Donald Trump meanwhile cheered the House vote, tweeting that lawmakers "took major steps toward securing our schools by passing the STOP School Violence Act. We must put the safety of America's children FIRST by improving training and by giving schools and law enforcement better tools. A tragedy like Parkland can't happen ever again!"

The school safety measure was one of two bills included in a modest White House plan released over the weekend to combat school shootings. The other bill would strengthen, but not expand, the federal background check system for gun purchases.

The background checks bill has stalled in the Senate amid objections from some Republicans and concern by Democrats that it is insufficient. Without strong advocacy from the White House, an ambitious gun package appeared unlikely to even get off the ground, given most Republicans' opposition to any new restrictions on gun rights.

Ryan Petty, whose daughter, Alaina, was killed in the Parkland shooting, told senators, "Nikolas Cruz and the deadly danger he posed were the worst-kept secrets in Parkland."

Petty, his voice shaking, called on lawmakers to follow the lead of Florida, which just passed legislation that raises the minimum age to buy rifles from 18 to 21; extends a three-day waiting period for handgun purchases to include long guns; and bans bump stocks, which allow guns to mimic fully automatic fire.

"Build on common ground," Petty said.

Elsewhere Wednesday, Cruz, 19, appeared in court in Fort Lauderdale, Fla., and was arraigned on a 34-count indictment in connection with the shooting rampage.

He did not speak, and a plea of innocent was entered on his behalf after state prosecutors filed notice that they would seek the death penalty in the case.

Information for this article was contributed by Matthew Daly and Kevin Freking of The Associated Press and by Joseph Tanfani of the Los Angeles Times.


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