[Congressional Record Volume 157, Number 23 (Monday, February 14, 2011)]
[Senate]
[Pages S652-S653]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
THIRD ANNIVERSARY OF THE NORTHERN ILLINOIS UNIVERSITY SHOOTING
Mr. DURBIN. Mr. President, 3 years ago today, a mentally disturbed
gunman walked into a campus lecture hall at Northern Illinois
University in DeKalb and shot 22 students, killing 5 of them.
John Peters, the president of Northern Illinois University, the
students, families, faculty, and employees pulled together after that
tragedy, and I joined them at an observance with then Senator and now
President Obama to acknowledge the grief they all felt and we shared. I
am proud to report that the Northern Illinois University community is
stronger and more resilient today than ever.
In the aftermath of the shooting, we asked a lot of questions about
what led to it. Naturally, there were so many innocent victims. We
asked what we could have done to prevent it. Three years later, we are
still trying to make sense of it.
Some believe that nothing can be done if a disturbed person is
determined to commit an act of violence. But I believe something can be
done.
For a long time, we have overlooked a very obvious and very
compelling fact. Many young people do not demonstrate serious mental
illness until they have left their home and high school and go off to
college. We have overlooked the mental health of students on campuses.
Many mental illnesses manifest in this period when young people leave
the security of home, regular medical care, and the support of a
network of family and friends.
A friend of our family, a young man, went to the same university over
30 years ago. Gary was a peculiar kind of his own type of person in
high school. But within 30 days at the university, living in a college
dorm, certain mental illnesses we were not even aware of manifested
themselves and he suffered from schizophrenia the rest of his short
life. It manifested itself at that campus.
It is easier for a young person's problems to go unnoticed when they
are away from parents, old friends, and the high school community.
Sometimes they get worse. People do not even notice.
The consequences of not detecting or addressing mental health needs
among students are very real. Forty-five percent of college students
report having felt so depressed it was difficult to function. Ten
percent even contemplated suicide.
But while the needs for mental health services on campuses are
rising, colleges are facing financial pressures of their own and are
having trouble meeting the demand. A recent survey of college
counseling centers indicates the average ratio of professional staff to
students is 1 to 1,952, and at 4-year public universities it is 1 to
every 2,600 students. It is little wonder that many young people with
these problems go unnoticed.
Shortly after the tragedy at Northern Illinois University, I wrote a
bill called the Mental Health on Campus Improvement Act to help schools
meet the needs of their students. The bill would provide resources for
colleges and universities to improve their mental health services and
would call for the development of a public nationwide campaign to
educate campus communities about mental health. We know troubled
students who receive appropriate counseling and support can succeed in
college and life. These services make an impact. Students who seek help
are six time less likely to kill themselves.
By providing critical resources to colleges, the Mental Health on
Campus Improvement Act would ensure that more young people receive the
help they need before facing a crisis.
The main elements of this bill were included in a proposal to
reauthorize the Garrett Lee Smith Memorial Act last year. I will
continue to work on this legislation to get it enacted so we can give
colleges the help they need to identify and treat students with mental
health issues.
[[Page S653]]
We also know from Northern Illinois University, as well as from the
tragedies at Virginia Tech and Tucson, that we need to fill the gaps in
the Federal gun background check system.
No one is proposing to take guns away from responsible American
hunters and law-abiding citizens. The Supreme Court has made it clear
that individuals have a right to own guns. I respect that decision. But
the Court has also said that the second amendment is ``not a right to
keep and carry any weapon whatsoever in any manner whatsoever and for
whatever purpose.''
For years, laws on the books have prohibited those with histories of
serious mental illness and substance abuse from buying guns. State
agencies and Federal agencies need to work more closely together to
make sure the background check system is fully updated with this
critical information.
Today is a time for our country to remember the lives and mourn the
loss at Northern Illinois University of five promising young Americans
whose life stories were cruelly cut short 3 years ago. But as we look
back, we must also--as they say at Northern; their slogan--move
``Forward, Together Forward'' in the true Northern Illinois University
spirit.
Mr. President, I yield the floor and suggest the absence of a quorum.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. The clerk will call the roll.
The bill clerk proceeded to call the roll.
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. Mr. President, I ask unanimous consent that the
order for the quorum call be rescinded.
The ACTING PRESIDENT pro tempore. Without objection, it is so
ordered.
Mr. ROCKEFELLER. Mr. President, might I ask, what is the pending
business?
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