As Uvalde starts school year, mistrust runs high

CBS investigates Texas' response to school shootings

Austin, Texas — A new and worrisome school year begins Tuesday in Uvalde.

There is new high fencing around the Texas community's public school campuses that still isn't finished, a heavy police patrol that many families don't trust and no classes ever again at Robb Elementary School, three months after a gunman with an AR-15-style rifle killed 19 children and two teachers inside two adjoining fourth-grade classrooms.

Students who attended Robb will be split between two other schools as they try to return to some kind of sense of normalcy, CBS Houston affiliate KHOU-TV reports.

The first day of school for many of them won't be easy. Some will be heading back to class without their best friends and teachers.

I'm "very anxious and scared," one told KHOU.

Families greet each other at Uvalde Elementary School's Meet the Teacher night on August 30, 2022, before the start of the new school year following the mass shooting at Robb Elementary in Uvalde, Texas. NURI VALLBONA / REUTERS

Ashley Morales is putting her son, Jeremiah, back in class - because she says she has no other choice as a working single mother. She will drop him off outside Uvalde Elementary on the first day. She says parents won't be allowed inside.

"I'm just nervous, scared," said Morales, whose son was a third-grader last year at Robb Elementary and lost three friends in the May 24 massacre. During a recent "Meet the Teacher" night, she felt a rush of anxiety walking down the school hall.

"Oh my gosh, it's actually going to happen," she said. "School is going to start."

Although school already started weeks ago in many parts of Texas, officials pushed back the first day of class in Uvalde after a summer of unfathomable heartache, anger and revelations of widespread failures by law enforcement who allowed an 18-year-old gunman to fire inside the adjoining classrooms for more than 70 minutes.

Despite pushing back the start of the year, Uvalde school officials said several enhanced security measures remain incomplete, including installing additional cameras and new locks.

The Robb Elementary School sign is seen covered in flowers and gifts on June 17, 2022 in Uvalde, Texas after the mass shooting there. / Getty Images

The Texas Department of Public Safety has committed to putting nearly three dozen state troopers on Uvalde campuses - but that's of no comfort to some families since there were more than 90 state troopers on scene during the attack.

But for those families who lost a loved one that day, it just doesn't feel like enough, KHOU reports.

"It's not going to make the people feel safe. They can hire 10 cops and 15 cops it's not going to make a difference. People do not feel safe in Uvalde," Vincent Salazar, the grandfather of Laila Salazar, who was one of the victims who died in the shooting, lamented to KHOU.

More than 100 families in Uvalde signed up for virtual school, while others pulled their kids out of the district and enrolled them in private schools. One teacher who was shot in the abdomen and survived, Elsa Avila, will not be greeting students for the first time in 30 years because she is still recovering.

A damning report by a Texas House committee found that nearly 400 officers in all rushed to Robb Elementary after the shooting but hesitated for more than hour to confront the shooter. Body camera and surveillance footage showed heavily armed officers, some holding bulletproof shields, stacked in the hallway but not advancing to the classroom.

Steve McCraw, head of the Texas Department of Public Safety, called the response "an abject failure."

Last month, the Uvalde school board fired district police Chief Pete Arredondo, who McCraw and the House report accused of failing to take control of the scene and wasting time by looking for a key for a classroom door that was likely unlocked. The firing hasn't quieted demands for others to face punishment. One other officer - Uvalde Lt. Mariano Pargas, the acting police chief that day - has been placed on administrative leave.

Many school districts across Texas are asking students and staff to wear maroon and white Tuesday to stand in solidarity with Uvalde CISD on their first day of school, CBS Dallas reports.

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