Newtown, Jan 24 : Newtown residents are divided on what to do with the school building
where 26 people were killed, with some favoring demolition and construction of a
memorial and others encouraging renovations.
Many passionately gave their
opinions at an emotional public meeting about the fate of Sandy Hook
Elementary.
"I have two children who had everything taken from them,"
said Audrey Bart, whose children attend the school but weren't injured in the
shooting. "The Sandy Hook Elementary School is their school. It is not the
world's school. It is not Newtown's school. We cannot pretend it never happened,
but I am not prepared to ask my children to run and hide. You can't take away
their school."
But fellow Sandy Hook parent Stephanie Carson said she
can't imagine ever sending her son back to the building.
"I know there
are children who were there who want to go back," Carson said. "But the reality
is, I've been to the new school where the kids are now, and we have to be so
careful just walking through the halls. They are still so scared."
The
meeting at Newtown High School drew about 200 people. A second meeting is set.
Town officials also are planning private meetings with the victims' families to
get their input.
Police say Adam Lanza, 20, killed 20 first-graders and
six adults in the Dec. 14 massacre at Sandy Hook. They say he killed his mother
at the home they shared in Newtown before opening fire with a semiautomatic
rifle at the school and killing himself as police arrived.
Although
opinions were mixed, most agreed that the Sandy Hook children and teachers
should stay together. They've been moved to a school building about seven miles
away in a neighboring town that has been renamed Sandy Hook Elementary
School.
Mergim Bajraliu, a senior at Newtown High School, attended Sandy
Hook, and his sister is a fourth-grader there. He said the school should stay as
it is, and a memorial for the victims should be built there.
"We have our
best childhood memories at Sandy Hook Elementary School, and I don't believe
that one psychopath — who I refuse to name — should get away with taking away
any more than he did on Dec 14," he said.
Last week, residents around
town expressed similar opinions about the school's future.
"I'm very
torn," said Laurie Badick, of Newtown, whose children attended the school
several years ago. "Sandy Hook school meant the world to us before this
happened. ... I have my memories in my brain and in my heart, so the actual
building, I think the victims need to decide what to do with that."
Susan
Gibney, who lives in Sandy Hook, said she purposely doesn't drive by the school
because it's too disturbing. She has three children in high school, but they
didn't attend Sandy Hook Elementary School. She believes the building should be
torn down.
"I wouldn't want to have to send my kids back to that school,"
said Gibney, 50. "I just don't see how the kids could get over what happened
there."
Fran Bresson, a retired police officer who attended Sandy Hook
Elementary School in the 1950s, wants the school to reopen, but he thinks the
hallways and classrooms where staff and students were killed should be
demolished.
"To tear it down completely would be like saying to evil,
'You've won,'" the 63-year-old Southbury resident said.
Residents of
towns where mass shootings occurred have grappled with the same dilemma. Some
have renovated, some have demolished.
Columbine High School, where two
student gunmen killed 12 schoolmates and a teacher, reopened several months
afterward. Crews removed the library, where most of the victims died, and
replaced it with an atrium.
On an island in Norway where 69 people — more
than half of them teenagers attending summer camp — were killed by a gunman in
2011, extensive remodeling is planned. The main building, a cafeteria where 13
of the victims died, will be torn down.
Virginia Tech converted a
classroom building where a student gunman killed 30 people in 2007 into a peace
studies and violence prevention center.
An Amish community in
Pennsylvania tore down the West Nickel Mines Amish School and built a new school
a few hundred yards away after a gunman killed five girls there in
2006.
Newtown First Selectwoman E. Patricia Llodra said that in addition
to the community meetings, the town is planning private gatherings with the
victims' families to talk about the school's future. She said the aim is to
finalize a plan by March.
"I think we have to start that conversation
now," Llodra said. "It will take many, many months to do any kind of school
project. We have very big decisions ahead of us. The goal is to bring our
students home as soon as we can."
Ends
SA/EN
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» Newtown weighs fate of Conn. school where 26 died
Newtown weighs fate of Conn. school where 26 died
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