Students Walk Out Of Arizona High Schools In Solidarity With Gun Reform Efforts

By Casey Kuhn
Published: Wednesday, March 14, 2018 - 3:25pm
Updated: Wednesday, March 14, 2018 - 3:32pm

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(Photo by Casey Kuhn - KJZZ)
Students gathered at Mountain Ridge High School in Glendale.

Students across the Valley walked out of their classrooms Wednesday on the one-month anniversary of the Parkland school shooting in Florida that left 17 dead.

A news helicopter hovered overhead at Mountain Ridge High School in Glendale in the morning when hundreds of students walked out of class to raise their voices in support of gun reform.

The walkout was arranged in part by 18-year-old senior Rylee Tinnel.

"These horrible acts may not have a location in common, victims in common or motivations in common," Tinnel said over the speakers on the football field. "What each shooting does have is a man with a gun that shouldn't have been able to get one in the first place."

(Photo by Casey Kuhn - KJZZ)
Mountain Ridge High School students had a moment of silence for the Parkland School shooting victims.

Tinnel spoke to the students gathered, some in orange shirts to symbolize solidarity with gun-control efforts.

“There was a lot bigger of a turnout than I expected and I was a little bit worried and I saw so many people here and a lot of people I didn’t expect to see, it was really cool,” she said.

Some students were in tears, others held their fists up and some had homemade signs, like 16-year-old Madison Horton.

“We just hope it somewhat counts for anything because we’re not 18, our vote isn’t heard, yet our lives are the ones in danger and I feel like that really needs to be taken into account,” Horton said, “because we do have a voice and we are going to do something to activate it if anyone will listen.”

Tinnel said this is the first kind of politically influenced event she's organized, which she did along with 17-year-old Jacob Sumner.

“It’s time to take action," Tinnel said. "These are the lives of people you know. It’s not just a school in Florida it could be our school tomorrow. It could be you and your family at the mall. So it’s time to stand up and it’s time to change the way things are for everyone.”

Other schools across the Valley held memorials and moments of silence for the shooting victims.

(Photo by Casey Kuhn - KJZZ)
Students in Glendale hold signs for the victims of the Parkland High School shooting.
(Photo by Casey Kuhn - KJZZ)
Students in Glendale hold signs for the victims of the Parkland High School shooting.
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