Weeks after a school shooting, students return for classes at Apalachee
High School
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[September 24, 2024]
By CHARLOTTE KRAMON
WINDER, Ga. (AP) — Apalachee High School is set to reopen for classes
Tuesday, almost three weeks after a school shooting killed two students
and two teachers and injured nine others at the campus northeast of
Atlanta.
Police say 14-year-old student Colt Gray slipped out of math class on
the morning of Sept. 4 with an AR-15-style rifle given to him by his
father. Within minutes, sounds of gunshots rippled across the hall and
students crouched behind desks as teachers barricaded classroom doors.
The school went into lockdown. Some students saw dead bodies as police
officers led them to the football field, where others bled from the
grazing of a bullet.
Now, Apalachee students are returning to school.
“I don't want to go back because it is my last year and things are a
little hard on me,” said Apalachee student Junior Garcia Ramirez, who
was close to the football coach killed by the shooter.
But the open house hosted by the school on Monday helped Ramirez feel
more “prepared” to go back. He said there “wasn't a corner” of the
school without staff, police officers, counselors or therapy dogs
roaming the halls. He was especially glad to hear from school board
officials and see how much they cared.
The atmosphere was one of both joy and unease, Ramirez said. Students
were excited to be back together, but some were on edge about returning
to classes as the blocked-off hallway where the shooting happened
reminded them of when their safety was at risk.
Within two days of the shooting, Gray was charged with four counts of
murder, and his father with related charges. Officials say Gray shot and
killed Christian Angulo and Mason Schermerhorn, both 14, and teachers
Richard Aspinwall, the 39-year-old football coach, and Cristina Irimie,
53. Another teacher and eight other students were injured.
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A memorial is seen at Apalachee High School after the Wednesday
school shooting, Saturday, Sept. 7, 2024, in Winder, Ga. (AP
Photo/Mike Stewart, File)
Classes will resume for half days until students return from fall
break in mid-October in what the school calls a “phased return.” The
hall where the shooting occurred will be closed for the rest of the
school year, so buses will take students to a building a few miles
away for social studies classes. There will also be more law
enforcement on campus in addition to counselors and therapy dogs,
just like there were at the open house.
Apalachee parent Amanda Buckingham appreciates the shorter class
periods with less school work.
“I think that's going to help with the healing process and kids
working together again with one another, and talking about their
feelings while they're in that setting,” Buckingham said.
Anxious parents brought their kids back to the neighboring
elementary and middle schools in Winder less than a week after the
shooting. Some expressed concerns about ongoing safety protocols at
all three campuses, even as police officers stood outside.
Other community members worry the school isn't doing enough, and
petitioned for metal detectors, long-term plans for law enforcement,
and at least temporary options for online learning.
“There are safety measures in place, and just because you don’t see
them doesn’t mean they’re not there, contrary to what you hear and
see on the social media world," Barrow County Sheriff Jud Smith said
at a press conference Monday in front of the school.
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