News and Music Discovery
Play Live Radio
Next Up:
0:00
0:00
0:00 0:00
Available On Air Stations

Gov. Beshear Signs Bill Into Law Requiring All School Resource Officers To Carry Guns

Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear
J. Tyler Franklin
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear
Credit J. Tyler Franklin
Kentucky Gov. Andy Beshear

Governor Andy Beshear has signed a bill into law requiring all Kentucky school resource officers, or SROs, to carry a gun.

“The threats to our children in our schools is very real,” Beshear said, citing incidents where guns were found on school campuses, a thwarted school shooting plot in Shelby County, and the 2018 shooting in Marshall County.

“I simply cannot ask a school resource officer to stop an armed gunman entering a school without them having the ability to not only achieve this mission, but also to protect themselves,” he said.

All school resource officers are already armed, according to the Kentucky Center for School Safety. But the new law likely ends discussions in Jefferson County about creating an unarmed school police force. Some in Louisville worry arming school resource officers puts children of color at risk, and want local school boards to have control over deciding whether to arm SROs. Beshear said he hoped people with those concerns “felt heard.”

“We understand that there are some children in our schools that do not feel safe because of the presence of an armed officer, and that is something that we have to address,” he said.

State law allows the governor to sign a bill into law, veto it, or let it become law without his signature. A veto would probably have been overridden, given the strong level of support for the measure in the state house and senate. The measure passed the senate 34-1 and the house 78-8.

Copyright 2020 WKU Public Radio

Jess is LPM's Education and Learning Reporter. Jess has reported on K-12 education for public radio audiences for the past five years, from the swamps of Southeast Louisiana at WWNO, New Orleans Public Radio, to the mountains of North Carolina at WUNC in Chapel Hill. Her stories have aired on national programs and podcasts, including NPR's All Things Considered, Morning Edition, and Weekend Edition, Here & Now and Reveal from the Center for Investigative Reporting. A Louisville native, Jess has her bachelor's degree from Centre College, and her masters in Journalism and Mass Communication from the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill.