Teacher Testifies That Armed Teachers Protect Children

The fight to arm teachers continues as more step forward in support

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Kasey Hansen teaches special needs at several schools around Salt Lake City, UT in the Granite School District. She talks about how she was never forced to think about school gunmen until Sandy Hook, and how she then got her concealed carry permit, took free training offered to teachers in Utah, and then bought a Cobra 380 handgun.

In the 10 years since teachers have been allowed to carry guns in Utah, no fatal K-12 school shootings have occurred. With teachers like Hansen, there’s little question as to why.

cloak tuck 3.0Most of her students are disabled or have a cochlear implant which makes it even more urgent for her to be familiar with her weapon and prepared for the worst.

This article talks about how more than 80 bills were submitted in 2013 to arm schools or staff but only a few states went through with them instead of making their schools gun-free zones. We need to look at the facts, it all comes down to what has been proven to work in preventing tragedies and what not proved to work.

More than 92% of mass shootings have happened in gun-free zones since 2009. Gun-free zones are obviously not a preventative measure or a solution. Utah has shown us that in the 10 years since teachers have been allowed to carry guns no fatal K-12 school shootings have occurred. This should not be ignored by our media and those on any side of our political system.

Arming teachers must be acknowledged as prevention and the solution for protecting our children from further tragedies.

27 year old Kasey Hansen is a special needs teacher, working at multiple schools throughout the Granite School District around Salt Lake City, UT each day, and she proudly carries a concealed weapon. Additionally, all of her students have hearing aids or a cochlear implant, which could make an emergency situation more imperative for her to handle swiftly.

 

“I never really thought about it before Sandy Hook,” says Hansen, who was in a classroom teaching when she heard news of the school shooting. “It just killed me. It’s something personal when you mess with students or children. …It’s as if you were messing with one of our own.”

Hansen got her concealed-carry permit and took advantage of a free training course which was offered to teachers. She then bought a Cobra 380 handgun which she named Lucy and started carrying it in K-12 classrooms.

 

“I think every teacher should carry,” Hansen said. “We are the first line of defense. Someone is going to call the cops and they are going to be informed, but how long is it going to take for them to get to the school? And in that time how many students are going to be affected by the gunman roaming the halls?”

 

She further explains, “I based it (Lucy) on Despicable Me 2, on the spy who Gru falls in love with. She’s a secret agent spy, and she likes to carry her lipstick Taser or her weapons with her and uses them on the bad guys, so I named my gun Lucy after her.” In the 10 years since teachers have been allowed to carry guns in Utah, no fatal K-12 school shootings have occurred. With teachers like Hansen, there’s little question as to why.

 

Hansen goes on to declare “I want to protect my students, I’m going to stand in front of a bullet for any student that is in my protection and so I want another option to defend us.”

 

In 2013 more than 80 bills were introduced in at least 33 states related to arming teachers or school staff, but only Alabama, Kansas, South Dakota, Tennessee and Texas enacted laws affecting public schools, according to a report by the Council of State Governments. In the state of Wisconsin, concealed carry permit holders can request permission to carry from the principal of their local school, and a new law just went into effect this year allowing both off duty and retired LEO’s to carry in schools as well.  The Outdoor Channel’s in-depth documentary Safe Haven hosted by Katie Pavlich was an eye-opening look into just how ineffective gun-free zones really are.

 

As the fight to allow campus carry on colleges rages on, let’s not forget that primary schools deserve our attention as well. All of our children’s lives have value, regardless of their age, and they all deserve to be protected by any means necessary. I wish we had more teachers willing to arm themselves on behalf of our nation’s children. I know for my own children, I would appreciate a teacher like Kasey Hansen willing to stand and fight against the threat of any attacker wishing to harm students.

Author: Annie Stonebreaker

Annie is attending North Idaho College for a degree in journalism and is enjoying writing about everything guns for Defend and Carry. She finds our right to bear arms imperative and can get quite spicy on the topic. In her spare time she loves reading, playing outdoors, any water activities, eating sweet treats, eating in general, playing music or spending time with her Fiance, and being surrounded by good friends, conversation and laughter.

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