Under the bill, parents would not necessarily know or be notified if their child's teacher were armed
State legislators in Tennessee passed a bill Tuesday allowing teachers and school staff in the state to be armed.
The bill, according to the summary, authorizes a faculty or staff member of a school to carry a concealed handgun on school grounds subject to certain conditions:
After the vote on the bill, people in the room were heard chanting, "Blood on your hands."
The bill now heads to the desk of Republican Gov. Bill Lee. If he does not veto it, the bill becomes law with or without his signature.
CNN has reached out to Lee's office for comment.
The bill puts the nationwide debate over arming educators back in the spotlight as mass shootings continue not only in American schools but at parades, festivals, places of worship and more. Gun violence is the leading killer of children in the United States - so far, 436 children under 18 have been killed in gun violence this year, according to data from the Gun Violence Archive.
In March of 2023, three children and three adults were killed in a shooting at a private elementary school in Nashville. The shooter, a 28-year-old former student, was shot and killed by police.
Thirty-four states bar teachers and the general public from carrying guns in K-12 schools, according to data from Everytown for Gun Safety.
However, the Giffords Law Center says most states have some kind of law allowing armed educators.
Delaware is one of the states which allows people with concealed carry permits to keep guns in locked cars on K through 12 campuses.
New Jersey and other states allow schools to decide whether individuals can carry firearms.
Only a few states let members of the public with concealed carry permits to bring guns into schools.
Under the Tennessee bill, parents would not necessarily know or be notified if their child's teacher were armed - a point of contention for many of the bill's opponents.
"A teacher is not allowed to put a rainbow flag on her desk, but she's allowed to carry a gun in this state," Democratic state Sen. Raumesh Akbari said.
Bill co-sponsor Republican state Sen. Paul Bailey said there is "a lot of misinformation" about the legislation, which "does not require any teacher in this state to carry a gun while working."
"This bill is completely permissive," he said. "It simply gives a faculty or staff member the option."
The bill does not, however, allow weapons to be carried openly "or in any other manner in which the handgun is visible to ordinary observation," and does not allow handguns to be carried in "stadiums, gymnasiums, or auditoriums when school-sponsored events are in progress," nor in meetings where tenure or disciplinary matters are being discussed.
WPVI contributed to this post.
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