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    Georgia could become the first state with weapons detection in all public schools

    KahawaTungu ReporterBy KahawaTungu ReporterMarch 25, 2026No Comments2 Mins Read
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    Georgia could become the first state to require every student to be checked for weapons when arriving at a public school each day.

    A bill is nearing passage that would require weapons detection systems in a further reaction to a 2024 school shooting that killed four.

    “That rifle would have never reached our hallways,” said Daria Lezczynska, a junior at Apalachee High School in Winder, where the shooting took place. “Lives would have been saved. Families would not be grieving, Students like me would not be carrying this trauma.”

    Some schools have long used metal detectors or required students to carry clear backpacks to cut down on weapons.

    But a new generation of technology marries computer analysis with cameras or the same electromagnetic fields as metal detectors to detect knives and guns. The systems have spread rapidly through schools, arenas, stadiums and hospitals.

    “It’s very commonplace for me to walk through a weapons detection system when I enter into a courthouse,” said Chuck Efstration, the bill’s sponsor and Republican house majority leader who represents the Apalachee campus.

    “Georgia’s students and educators deserve similar security with weapons detection systems inside of every Georgia public school.”

    There’s little rigorous research nationwide proving that weapons detectors prevent school shootings.

    In Georgia, there are questions about who will pay what can be $10,000 or more per system. School employees must staff checkpoints and search bags. And even supporters of the systems say searchers can become dulled by a multitude of false alarms and miss the few actual weapons.

    Some question whether weapons detectors are necessary in elementary schools, as Efstration’s bill mandates. And those who find Georgia’s gun laws too permissive say installing weapons detectors everywhere is a form of surrender, accepting that society will be awash in guns and violence.

    A Senate committee on Monday passed an amended version of Efstration’s bill, meaning it needs final votes in the Senate and House in the closing days of Georgia’s 2026 legislative session before reaching Republican Gov. Brian Kemp’s desk for his signature or veto.

    By Agencies

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