Tennessee Senate Passes Bill to Arm Teachers After Gallery Cleared Due to Outbursts

TN Capitol Protest

The Tennessee State Senate on Tuesday passed legislation to allow some teachers to be armed on public school property, but the Senate gallery needed to be cleared prior to the vote following a series of outbursts from activists opposed to the bill.

Lawmakers voted to pass SB 1325, which would allow school faculty and staff to carry concealed handguns if they obtain an enhanced handgun carry permit, complete 40 hours of school safety training annually, obtain approval from relevant school and law enforcement authorities, and are not restricted from owning firearms.

Videos posted to the social media platform X show the gallery audience interrupting lawmakers as they discussed the bill, eventually leading Lt. Governor Randy McNally to order spectators cleared.

Multiple individuals initially refused to leave the gallery, according to Tennessean reporter Rachel Wegner, who wrote to X that “Covenant mom Mary Joyce and others” were among those who did not initially clear the chamber.

Wegner reported the standoff eventually ended with the protesters leaving the Senate gallery, but two Covenant mothers were allowed to remain “with permission from Speaker McNally.”

Yes, Every Kid

WSMV 4 reported that “dozens” of individuals were asked to leave following the outbursts. The outlet confirmed the protesters continued to watch lawmakers on Capitol grounds after being escorted out of the Senate gallery.

The legislation ultimately passed with 25 votes in favor and five votes against.

State Senator Paul Bailey (R-Sparta), the bill’s original sponsor, previously predicted the bill had a high likelihood of passing due to the strenuous requirements placed on those seeking to carry firearms on school property.

“They must possess a valid handgun carry permit issued by this state, must be fingerprinted by the appropriate law enforcement agency, must pass a psychological evaluation,” Bailey explained. He added, “They must have written authorization of the chief of the appropriate law enforcement agency; they must complete a minimum of 40 hours of training specific to school policing that has been approved by Peace Officer Standards & Training Commission.”

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Tom Pappert is the lead reporter for The Tennessee Star, and also reports for The Georgia Star News, The Virginia Star, and the Arizona Sun Times. Follow Tom on X/Twitter. Email tips to [email protected].
Photo “Protest” by Vivian Jones.

 

 

 

 

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5 Thoughts to “Tennessee Senate Passes Bill to Arm Teachers After Gallery Cleared Due to Outbursts”

  1. Tim Price

    Why do people from Nashville think they are the only ones represented by state government?

  2. David H

    This makes a lot of sense and is better than hiring SRO’s. In Parkland FL, the SRO hid in the parking lot while 17 kids were killed. I would much rather have armed teachers. It’s common sense.
    Thank you to the people supporting it.

  3. GRIZZ

    So in other words they’ll never be allowed to carry a firearm in school because of all the legal hurdles placed forth and another Covenant is possible due to no SROs being at the school. Once again our state RINOS are virtual signaling to their constitutes and passing legislation that has little or no effect.

  4. Kendra Tilley

    If teachers in Covenant were armed perhaps those that died would have been saved. These people need to get their heads on straight. The reason that school was chosen was because the shooter knew it was not secure. A good guy with a gun is the best deterrent for a bad guy with a gun.

  5. Elliott

    the covenant mothers are just as delusional as the sandy hook mothers if they think that gun free zones save lives.
    I want my children to be protected like we protect all precious things. the way we protect the president.
    with folks that carry guns to guard them.
    If teachers want to do that? I’m all for it.

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