Kindergarteners could learn gun safety in school under a bill gaining
momentum in Utah
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[February 15, 2025]
By HANNAH SCHOENBAUM
SALT LAKE CITY (AP) — Utah students in as early as kindergarten would be
required to learn about firearm safety in the classroom under a bill
that passed the state House with overwhelming support Friday.
The Republican-controlled chamber approved the measure in a 59-10 vote
and sent it to the Senate, despite concerns from some gun violence
prevention advocates that it places an undue burden on children.
Under the proposal, public school students would receive mandatory
instruction throughout their K-12 years on how to respond if they
encounter a gun. The lessons, which could be presented in a video or by
an instructor displaying an actual firearm, would demonstrate best
practices for safely handling and storing a gun to prevent accidents.
Elementary age children would learn about gun safety on at least three
occasions by the time they reach sixth grade, with the possibility for
that instruction to begin in kindergarten, when kids are around five
years old.
The bill’s Republican sponsor, Rep. Rex Shipp of Cedar City, said it's
aimed at preventing accidental shootings by and of young children. The
lessons, he said, will be age-appropriate for each grade level, with
younger students learning to avoid touching a gun and alert an adult
immediately.
“A lot of times when they don't have any firearms in their homes or
don't do any hunting and shooting, then these kids are not taught what
to do when they come in contact with a firearm,” Shipp said.
One other state, Tennessee, has a law on the books requiring firearm
safety training in public schools, but it lets education officials
determine in which grade they think it's appropriate for students to
start receiving that instruction. The lessons, set to begin next school
year, will be annual and cannot include live firearms or ammunition.
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Students walk into Liberty Elementary School during the first day of
class in Murray, Utah, Aug. 17, 2020. (AP Photo/Rick Bowmer, File)
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A Utah statute already allows firearm safety to be taught in
schools, but Shipp said teachers don't currently do so. His bill
makes it mandatory but allows parents to opt their kids out of the
instruction.
If it passes the similarly Republican-led Senate and is signed into
law, the lessons would begin next school year.
The effort comes a year after Gov. Spencer Cox signed a bill funding
tactical training for teachers who want to defend their classrooms
with guns. Republican sponsors said it was aimed at incentivizing
teachers to carry firearms in schools to protect students. Opponents
worried it would increase the likelihood that a student could gain
access to a gun.
Gun violence prevention advocates have applauded Utah Republicans
this year for growing gun safety education programs, but some argue
those lessons should only be aimed at adults.
The proposal unfairly places the responsibility of gun safety on
children rather than their parents, said Barbara Gentry of the Gun
Violence Prevention Center of Utah.
“Guns and gun safety are the responsibility of the adult gun owner,
not school children," Gentry said. "We support schools sending home
materials to parents outlining the importance of safe storage in
keeping our families and schools safe from gun violence."
Jaden Christensen, a volunteer with the Utah chapter of Moms Demand
Action, said lawmakers should instead look to grow programs that
teach parents the importance of keeping firearms away from children.
“The burden should always be on adults,” Christensen said.
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