Following the tragic events at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., St. Maryโs College of Maryland President, Joseph R. Urgo, has co-signed an open letter urging President Obama and Congress to take immediate action on gun control.
“All academic institutions from grade schools to colleges and universities are responsible for the educational preparation of our youth,โ said President Joseph R. Urgo. “Within this duty to educate, we must not forget the well-being of the full person, physical as well as intellectual. Iโve joined a community of my peers to make it imperative that we work to end the cycle of mass killing made possible by assault weapons. As a college president, I owe my studentsโand as citizens of a great country, we owe our youthโa safe environment in which to study, to grow, and without fear to become the next generation of adults.”
Generate by Presidents Lawrence M. Schall of Oglethorpe University and Elizabeth Kiss of Agnes Scott College, both in Atlanta, Ga., the letter, in only 48-hours, has been signed by more than 170 college and university presidents from across the country. The letter, in its entirety, is below.
If you would like more information or to speak with President Urgo, please contact Arminta Stanfield at 240-988-7418 or ajstanfield@smcm.edu.
December 19, 2012
On the same day our nation learned in horror that 20 first graders and six educators were gunned down at Sandy Hook Elementary School, young people around the country were learning if they had been accepted to their favored colleges and universities. For many years now, our nationโs leaders have engaged in fevered debates on higher education, yet lawmakers shy away from taking action on one issue that prevents thousands of young people from living lives of promise, let alone realizing their college dreams. That issue is gun safety.
Among the world’s 23 wealthiest countries, 80% of all gun deaths occur in the United States and 87% of all children killed with guns are killed here (Journal of Trauma and Acute Care Surgery).ย In 2010, 2,694 young people were killed by gunfire. 1,773 were victims of homicide; 67 were elementary school-age children. If those children and teens were alive today, they would fill 108 classrooms of 25 each.
We are college and university presidents. We are parents. We are Republicans, Democrats and Independents. We urge both our President and Congress to take action on gun control now. As a group, we do not oppose gun ownership. But, in many of our states, legislation has been introduced or passed that would allow gun possession on college campuses. We oppose such laws. We fully understand that reasonable gun safety legislation will not prevent every future murder. Identification a

