Hey, Boost readers. Normally this email is super positive and uplifting, but today I have some awful news to share about a recent school shooting.
In the wake of tragedy, it makes sense to feel scared or shocked or angry or confused. But you don’t have to feel hopeless. Read on to learn what happened and how you can join a movement of young people stepping up to do something about gun violence.
Let’s Do This, Ben, Editor-in-chief DoSomething
Do Something: Santa Clarita School Shooting
What happened and how you can take action.
WHAT HAPPENED
Two students are dead and at least three more are injured after a teenage gunman opened fire at a Santa Clarita High School on the morning of Thursday, November 14.
- About 20 minutes before classes started on November 14, 2019, a gunman opened fire at Saugus High School in Santa Clarita, California (which is about 40 miles north of Los Angeles).
- As students ran to escape the shooting, Hannah de Caussin and her daughter, a Saugus High School student, helped shelter students in their home nearby.
- This attack comes exactly a year after the Rancho Tehama Reserve shooting in Northern California and a year and one week after the Thousand Oaks shooting outside of Los Angeles.
- Days before this shooting in California, at least two Denver teens and 16 people in Chicago were wounded by gun violence.
On behalf of the DoSomething staff and community, our hearts go out to the victims, their families, and all those affected by gun violence. We thank the educators, first responders, medical staff, law enforcement, and all those responding to this tragedy with action and hope.
MEANWHILE, IN THE SENATE
- Sen. Richard Blumenthal heard news of the shooting while he was mid-sentence, speaking on the Senate floor. He asked his colleagues, “How can we turn the other way? How can we refuse to see that shooting in real time, demanding our attention, requiring our action?"
WHAT YOUNG PEOPLE ARE SAYING
- “This is too familiar. The helicopter footage of a school, the single file lines of students, the contradictory information, the stretchers with wounded children, the scared parents,” said March for Our Lives co-founder Lauren Hogg. “Santa Clarita we are with you.”
- “My heart is heavy hearing news of a mass shooting at Saugus High School in Santa Clarita, CA. We cannot let this be our reality,” said Youth Over Guns founder Ramon Contreras. “The lives of young people are at stake & yet no action from Republicans. This could’ve been prevented. We can have an America safe from gun violence.”
- “Today, it’s Santa Clarita. Tomorrow, it’s your community. I am sick of kids with hands above their heads. I am sick of tiny coffins,” said Brandon Wolf, a survivor of the Pulse nightclub shooting. “I am sick of our lives being torn apart while our leaders sell our politics to the highest bidder. If you aren’t willing to fix this, retire.”
How To Do Something Now
1) Practice self-care and help others do the same. Read and share this resource on coping with tragedy in the news and this guide on supporting victims in
the aftermath of mass shootings. You can also text HOME to 741-741 to access free, 24/7 support from a trained counselor.
2) Demand action from lawmakers. The Senate was literally debating a background checks bill at the moment the news of this shooting broke. Nearly 90% of Americans support background checks for gun owners. The House of Representative has already passed a bill -- use our easy tool to email your senators now.
3) Register to vote. Care about stopping gun violence? One of the most impactful things you can do is register to vote and elect lawmakers dedicated to protecting our schools and communities. Take 2 minutes and use our simple online tool to register to vote.
Copyright © 2019 , All rights reserved.
Our mailing address is: 19 West 21st Street, 8th Floor, New York, NY 10010
|