![]() ![]() It’s the first year since the tragedy that she plans to celebrate Valentine’s Day. “It’s year five, and it seems like a very year for some reason, like a shift of sorts,” she said. 14 on campus since the attack.īurgin, an English teacher, said she wasn’t sure how she would feel once she stepped onto the property, but it felt like it was the right next step in the healing process. ![]() It was the first time either had decided to spend Feb. Two teachers, Felicia Burgin and Cindi Helverson, stopped by a small public commemoration at a garden outside of the school Tuesday morning, at the corner of Holmberg and Pine Island roads. While the wounds remain deep five years later, for some people, time has made them less raw. “Unfortunately, I think that as a society we’ve become numb to mass shootings and when it hit home here, it brought an awareness to everything. ![]() At commemoration events, Laski said it feels like she’s gone back in time to the day in 2018. Laski said she worked with victim Nicholas Dworet’s dad and taught at the preschool victim Jaime Guttenberg attended. ![]()
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