Opinion: The Reality of America’s School Shooting Crisis

Photo from AP Photo/Gary McCullough

The shooting at Florida State University has (once again) urged calls for lawmakers and school officials to move past condolences and confront the systemic failures that continue to leave students vulnerable. 

Despite mounting death tolls and consistent outrage, political paralysis and neglected safety measures continue to ensure that each tragedy becomes part of an all too predictable cycle.

An Overview: The FSU Shooting

On April.17, gunfire erupted in Tallahassee, Florida on Florida State University’s campus and led to the deaths of two people and injuries of six others. Authorities reported that alleged shooter, 20-year-old FSU student Phoenix Ikner, was subdued on the scene and taken into custody with non-life-threatening injuries. Ikner, the stepson of a Leon County Sheriff’s deputy, allegedly used his stepmother’s handgun to carry out the attack.

The victims have been identified as Robert Morales, FSU dining coordinator and local high school football coach, and Tiru Chabba, regional vice president of Aramark, and husband and father of two. 

Investigators have not yet determined an official motive, but those who knew Ikner have since spoken to his demeanor and ideological views. Prior to the shooting, Ikner “espoused so much white supremacist rhetoric and far-right rhetoric,” says Reid Seybold, a member of the same political discussion group as Ikner a few years before. Phoenix Ikner’s depravity of view, according to Seybold, “made enough people uncomfortable where certain people had stopped coming…we reached the breaking point with Phoenix, and we asked him to leave”.

79-year-old Susan Eriksen, the biological maternal grandmother of Ikner, believes that his step-mother, Leon Sheriff County Deputy, and his father’s views greatly affected his upbringing.

They taught him how to hunt, they’re bigoted people, they hated a lot of people

Photo from AP Photo/Charlotte Kramon
Weak Gun Laws and Predictable Tragedies

The FSU shooting is not an isolated incident but part of a devastating national pattern sustained by policy or a lack thereof. On Sept. 4, 2024, Apalachee High School in Barrow County, Georgia experienced its own tragedy when two students and two teachers were shot and killed and nine others were injured.

Georgia consistently ranks among the states with the weakest gun laws and requires neither permits nor background checks for firearm purchases. Governor Brian Kemp has proudly championed these pro-gun policies, even going so far as to celebrate the state’s “F” rating from gun safety organizations. In 2022, he signed legislation to support the concealed carry of firearms without a permit and prioritize the philosophy of gun access over public safety. 

As a direct consequence, his public statement offering condolences following the shooting at Apalachee struck many as a hollow but predictable performance.

Florida’s gun legislation is moving in a similar direction—backward. During a rollback of protections enacted in the wake of the 2018 Parkland massacre, the state’s lawmakers have pushed to lower the minimum age required to purchase rifles. Although the effort has temporarily stalled, it demonstrates the willingness of Florida officials to reverse previously fought-for reforms, even as mass shootings continue to devastate communities within the state.

A Retreat from Federal School Safety

On the first day of President Donald Trump’s second term, his administration abruptly fired all members of the Federal School Safety Clearinghouse External Advisory Board. The group, created under the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act of 2022 to improve school security after the Uvalde and Buffalo shootings, was defunded by The Department of Homeland Security. The department asserts that the move is a shift toward “national security,” but critics argue the very opposite. Some find the decision to dismantle a body tasked with protecting students to be a dangerous neglect of domestic safety.

The former board had united experts in education, law enforcement, mental health and threat assessment while also offering the perspective of three parents whose children had died from recent school shootings. Some members pushed for stronger mental health and crisis intervention services, while others advocated for physical security improvements, but all worked toward ensuring students’ safety.

Photo from Christian Monterrosa/The New York Times
Solutions: Ignored but Present

In Protecting America’s Schools, a 2019 U.S. Secret Service report, 61 percent of school attackers used easily accessible firearms acquired from their homes. In nearly every case, the attacker exhibited warning behaviors, such as threats, violent ideation and changes in behavior. As per the study, these early-onset signs could be addressed through proper intervention programs to stop any violence before it occurs.

Despite the roadmap provided by these findings and all those before it, the country-wide conversation continues to remain caught in a partisan deadlock. Universal background checks, mandatory gun storage and early threat intervention programs are all policies with overwhelming public support, but continue to languish due to political inactivity.

Preventing school shootings should never be a partisan issue but a fundamental responsibility. Even when preventative laws are introduced, they often struggle to gain the necessary communal support to progress beyond that initial stage.

Until lawmakers are willing to prioritize the lives of students over political convenience and personal agendas, school shootings will continue to escalate, and “thoughts and prayers” will remain an enduring symbol of the nation’s failure to protect its children.

Related

What To Know About the Apalachee High School Shooting

What is Capitol Hill Doing About Mass Shootings

Robb Elementary School Shooting Leaves 21 Dead and America Mourning

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