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Student-Led Activists Rally For Gun Control

Carmel High School junior Zoe Koniaris speaks to the crowd during the second annual March For Our Lives Indiana at the Statehouse. (Lauren Chapman/IPB News)
Carmel High School junior Zoe Koniaris speaks to the crowd during the second annual March For Our Lives Indiana at the Statehouse. (Lauren Chapman/IPB News)

Student-led gun control organizations  like We Live Indy and Students Demand Action gathered at the Statehouse Saturday.

They asked federal lawmakers to support the  universal background check bill H.R. 8, which is now in the U.S. Senate after passing the House.

Carmel High School junior Zoe Koniaris says she’s hopeful.

“I think change is being made. And I hope in like, 10 years or so, this issue will have like been settled as best it can be,” Koniaris says.

Similar legislation to H.R. 8  in the state legislature failed to get a committee hearing. Ed Smith, the president of Hoosiers Concerned About Gun Violence, says they didn't have a chance.

"These bills were dead on arrival. These lawmakers turned their backs on Indiana students," Smith says.

Multiple speakers, like Olivia Carlstedt, were connected to the school shooting in Noblesville last May, where  a student opened fire in a science class last years. She is a freshman at Ball State and helped launch the school's chapter of Students Demand Action.

“What happened in our school was unacceptable and it should not happen anywhere else,” Carlstedt says.

Activists say the nationwide student-led movement for gun control will not go away. Columbus East High School senior, Christian Omoruyi  says he hopes lawmakers know that.

“I hope that they take away that the young people of our country are not disconnected from our discourse. They are not standing idly by,” Omoruyi says.

Speakers addressed gun violence at all levels, from school shootings to domestic violence.

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Lauren Chapman is the digital producer for our statewide collaboration, and is based at WFYI in Indianapolis. She previous has worked at a basketball magazine, a top 30 newspaper, and a commercial television station. Lauren is new to public media, but in addition to her job "making stuff on the internet," she is also a radio and television reporter. She's a proud Ball State University alumna and grew up on the west side of Indianapolis.