Tony Montalto, the president of Stand With Parkland, a group founded by some of the families of the victims, met with the president to celebrate the launch of a school safety initiative.
that the rollout of the federal school safety clearinghouse website SchoolSafety.Gov was set for Monday, but the meeting with the president wasn't scheduled until Sunday night. Montalto added that he along with Stand With Parkland's board members and beta testers attended.
He added:"We've had discussions with the administration on all three pillars of Stand With Parkland's mission which of course includes the responsible firearms ownership provision." "These threat assessment tools are used to protect everyone that they're charged with, from our leaders to our infrastructure to our workplace."He added:"The eagle is also the mascot of Marjory Stoneman High School and as a group of families who lost someone there, we can think of no better tribute to our loved ones than to have a law passed that would help prevent these things in the future.
"He made a choice to leave [Stand With Parkland] and he has decided to pursue a further course and we hope he is successful in that," Montalto said. "Millions of students and staff members will benefit from the power of the federal government coming together to produce this one-stop shop for schools. Anytime you can get the office of the president to focus on the nation's students and teachers, that's a big day."
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