LAS VEGAS (AP) — Hardening school campuses, encouraging students to report troubled classmates and having the Legislature look at so-called "red flag" laws to confiscate guns from people deemed to be a threat are among ways to make Nevada schools safer, the state attorney general said Thursday.
A school safety report from Attorney General Adam Laxalt calls for expanded use of a mobile app called SafeVoice Nevada, widening an assessment program to identify and track troubled students from one school to another, and added armed officers on campus who, in Laxalt's words, are "trained, armed and a...
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