America and School Shootings

This article was last updated on April 16, 2022

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USA: Free $30 Oye! Times readers Get FREE $30 to spend on Amazon, Walmart…With yet another high profile school shooting taking place in the United States, I thought it was time to revisit the Everytown.org website, a site that has tracked all school shootings since the tragedy at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Connecticut on December 14, 2012 which claimed 20 children and 6 school staff members.

 
Everytown for Gun Safety is "…a movement of Americans working together to end gun violence and build safer communities. Gun violence touches every town in America. For too long, change has been thwarted by the Washington gun lobby and by leaders who refuse to take common-sense steps that will save lives."  
 
Three main groups make up the movement:
 
1.) Moms Demand Action for Gun Sense in America which was founded to demand action from both federal and state legislators, corporations and educational institutions to establish gun reforms.  It was founded by Shannon Watts one day after the Sandy Hook shooting.
 
2.) Mayors Against Illegal Guns: a coalition of more than 1000 current and former majors from small towns and big cities throughout America.
 
3.) Survivors of gun violence
 
Everytown for Gun Safety claims that more than 3 million people have joined their movement.
 
Now, let's look at the statistics collected by Everytown which include the following categories:
 
Discharged Firearm: the shooter discharged a firearm on school property
Injured 1 Person: the shooter injured at least one person but did not kill anyone
Killed 1 Person: the shooter killed at least one person
Attempted Suicide: the shooter attempted to commit suicide but was unsuccessful
Committed Suicide: the shooter was successful at committing suicide
 
Incidents are classified as school shootings when a firearm is discharged either within school buildings or on school or campus grounds.  Incidents in which firearms are brought into school but not fired are not included.
 
Here is the listing of school shootings since December 14, 2012 in chronological order including the latest school shooting in Oregon:
 
 

Since Sandy Hook, there has been at least one school shooting every week in the United States and a total of 142 school shootings over just under three years. 
 
In 2013, there were 36 incidents in which a firearm was discharged on school property.  This rose to 61 in 2014 and thus far in 2015, there have been 45 incidents.  
 
Here are some of the key statistics from the 142 school shooting incidents:
 
1.) 34 of the incidents resulted in the deaths of more than one person.
 
2.) 98 of the incidents resulted in injuries to at least one person.
 
3.) 62 of the incidents took place on college campuses and 80 of the incidents took place in Kindergarten to Grade 12 schools.
 
4.) 21 of the shooters were successful at committing suicide and 4 attempted to commit suicide but were unsuccessful.
 
In the Kindergarten to Grade 12 school shootings that took place in the first two years after the Sandy Hook shooting, 70 percent were perpetrated by minors and where it was possible to determine the source of the firearm, 63 percent of the firearms where obtained from the shooter's home.  More than one-third of the school shootings occurred after a confrontation or verbal argument intensified.
 
A list of United States school shootings that have taken place between 1979 and 2011 was compiled by Jessie Klein in his research for the "Bully Society: School Shootings and the Crisis of Bullying in America's Schools".  If we include the deaths up to and including the Sandy Hook shooting, since 1979, 297 victims have been claimed in school shootings with 32 at Virginia Tech in 2007, 26 at Sandy Hook in 2012 and 13 at Columbine in 1999 (all excluding the shooter or shooters).
 
It goes without saying that school should be a safe zone for all students and all staff.  While the incidents of major shootings are relatively rare, an average of one school shooting a week in the United States is one too many.

Click HERE to read more of Glen Asher's columns

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