Hundreds of people, including families who lost children in the Dec. 14 mass shooting, packed Newtown High School in Connecticut on Wednesday night so they could tell members of a state legislative task force on gun violence and childrenâs safety what changes in laws and policies they wanted to see.
Members of the General Assemblyâs 52-member bipartisan task force traveled to Newtown to hear from residents at the hearing. The task force, looking to make changes in areas ranging from gun control to mental health, held a similar hearing recently in Hartford.
Among those who spoke on Wednesday night was Scarlett Lewis, a 44-year-old single mother, whose 6-year-old son, Jesse Lewis, died in the shooting at Sandy Hook Elementary School.
âWe need to somehow hold onto that feeling of oeness.â Scarlet, mother of Jesse Lewis, child killed in Newtown. http://t.co/nQHBp4TC
The task force hearing in Newtown was held on the same day that the Senate Judiciary Committee in Washington held its first hearing on gun violence in the aftermath of the Connecticut shooting, which left 20 pupils and 6 staff members of the elementary school dead.
During the hearing in Washington, which the Lede covered earlier, former Representative Gabrielle Giffords called on lawmakers to be âbold and courageousâ in creating! solutions to reduce gun violence.
In Connecticut, the hearing also drew teachers with views on what steps should and should not be taken to quell violence.
Tom Swets, taught shooter Adam Lanza at NHS. He will quit tomorrow if teachers are told to carry guns. http://t.co/g73ULZeP
Earlier this week, The Newtown Bee, the townâs newspaper, reported that the first permanent memorial to the lives lost at Sandy Hook Elementary School had been dedicated.
First Permanent Memorial To Sandy Hook School Victims Is Dedicated http://t.co/yoGWPCK9 http://t.co/kGRSNUJH
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