Common Dreams: ‘Stop This Madness’: 3 Killed in Mass Shooting at Rhode Island High School Hockey Game

“This is no way for our kids to live,” said one gun control advocate.

Child safety advocates renewed calls for tighter gun control measures following a Monday mass shooting at a high school hockey game in Rhode Island that left three people including the gunman dead and three others injured.

WPRI reported that the father of a North Providence High School senior shot five members of his family at a hockey game at Dennis M. Lynch Arena in Pawtucket at around 2:30 pm local time. The student’s mother was killed at the rink, while his sister died after being rushed to a local hospital. Three other relatives are reportedly in critical condition at Rhode Island Hospital.

“We realized pretty quickly that it was a gunshot. It was very scary,” hockey player Silas Core said during an interview with WCVB, adding that he and his teammates rushed into a locker room.

“We barricaded the locker room with our bodies. We were all pressing up against it,” he said. “Everybody was, you know, worried about our parents and everybody.”

Pawtucket Police Chief Tina Goncalves said the shooting appeared to be “a family dispute,” a “tragic” but “isolated” incident.

Democratic Rhode Island Gov. Dan McKee said that “as governor, a parent, and a former coach, my heart breaks for the victims, families, students, and everyone impacted by the devastating shooting at Lynch Arena in Pawtucket.”

McKee added that he is “praying for our communities.”

Gun control advocates demanded more than the customary thoughts and prayers.

“As a native Rhode Islander who has played many games in that very rink, this tragedy hits especially close to home,” Stop Gun Violence board chair Brian Lemek said. “That space holds memories of community, competition, and joy—and now it’s filled with pain no community should have to carry.”

“The only thing young athletes should worry about is the scoreboard—not their safety,” he continued. “Our kids deserve spaces that bring communities together, they deserve to be safe, and they deserve a future free from this constant fear.”

“This is no way for our kids to live,” Lemek added. “We need to stop this madness.”

Monday’s incident follows December’s mass shooting at Brown University in Providence—which is less than 10 miles from Pawtucket—that left two people dead and nine others wounded.

“We can and should work together to promote responsible gun ownership and pass legislation like safe storage laws and red flag laws—widely supported measures that keep guns out of dangerous situations while respecting responsible ownership,” Lemek asserted Monday.

“I’m holding the victims and their loved ones in my heart,” he added, “and I’m more determined than ever to build a future where our kids are safe in the places meant for joy.”

Read the full piece in Common Dreams

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