The White House Has an Explanation for the Mystery Drones
BREAKING: DOJ Inspector General Reveals Details About FBI Informants and January 6
The Secret Service Agent Who Opened Fire on Trump's Would-Be Assassin Is a...
Funny How This Happens in a State Hostile Toward Self-Defense
Don't Even Think About Moving to Massachusetts With Unapproved Firearms
New Jersey, New York Senators Demand Briefing on Drone Incursions
John Fetterman Agrees to Meet With Pete Hegseth. Here's Why.
The Strangest News Segment Regarding Killer of UnitedHealthCEO
Comedian Slammed for Disgusting Jokes About UnitedHealthcare CEO
Justin Trudeau Has a Lot to Say About Kamala' s Loss, Too Bad...
Did Jill Biden Just Troll Kamala Harris?
Here's the Biden Administration's Last Effort to Undermine Trump's Border Wall Plan
Based John Fetterman Strikes Again — and Again
UK Announces Major Decision Regarding Puberty Blockers for Minors
Defense Department Is Combating 'Climate Change As a Security Concern for Africans'
Tipsheet

Ohio Will Allow Teachers to Carry Guns

AP Photo/John Minchillo

In the wake of the deadly Uvalde school shooting that left 19 kids and two adults dead, the heated debate of whether to arm teachers or not has been a major topic between both parties. 

Advertisement

In the midst of all the gun control talk, Ohio may soon allow teachers to be armed in classrooms.  

HB 99, which passed by a 23-9 vote in the State Senate and a 56-34 vote in the State House, was fast-tracked through the legislature, allowing teachers and other school staff to carry guns on school premises requiring only 24 hours of training. 

It would mandate at least 18 hours of general training, two hours of handgun training, two hours of "additional" general training, and two hours of "additional" handgun training, as well as requiring teachers to get yearly background checks. 

In a statement, Gov. Mike Dewine (R-OH) defended the bill that he is expected to sign saying, “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,” adding “House Bill 99 accomplishes these goals, and I thank the General Assembly for passing this bill to protect Ohio children and teachers. I look forward to signing this important legislation."

Advertisement

The bill will allow individual school districts to decide whether or not teachers can carry firearms, also giving schools the option to require teachers to have additional hours of training if they feel it’s needed. However, the bill says the initial training cannot be more than 24 hours.

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos

Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement