TEXAS – A Texas mother is on a mission for gun violence prevention, wanting President Biden to take more executive action on gun control.

“After a mass shooting, they always say ‘gun reform now’ and then they say ‘it’s not the right time, it’s too soon, the family hasn’t grieved.’ No. Stop beating around the bush and actually do something,” says Rhonda Hart.

The Texas mother, U.S. Army veteran, and former Santa Fe ISD school bus driver says she’s tired of President Joe Biden’s tough talk with no significant action.

“He comes out with a statement saying he’s adamant on gun control and then he doesn’t do anything,” Hart says.

Her anger persists despite the fact that on Thursday President Biden unveiled six immediate actions the federal government is taking to curb gun violence. 

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She’s especially frustrated after being chosen to join President Biden’s 100-day subcommittee to come up with policy addressing gun violence in America and now to see their recommendations not moving forward.

“It’s frustrating. You want a return on your emotional investment. I don’t want any more families to have to go through this B.S. and grief that comes with losing your child,” Hart laments.

Hart knows that pain all too well. In 2018, her 14-year-old daughter Kimberly Vaughan was among the eight students and two teachers gunned down in a school shooting in Santa Fe, Texas, near Houston.

Over the span of five minutes, a student packing multiple firearms shot several of his classmates and teachers. Hart was terrified and desperate to find out if her daughter was among them.

“We drove around to all of the emergency rooms in the area. She wasn’t there,” Hart says.

Then, after nearly 12 painstaking hours, her fears were confirmed.

“The chaplain from the Dickinson Police Department sat me down and he was like, ‘Ms. Hart…’ and that’s when the screaming started from another family on my left hand side. I’ll never get that scream out of my head and he told me that Kimberly had been shot and killed,” Hart says.

“They say that people can die from a broken heart and my actual chest hurt for about a month. I’ve never been so sick,” Hart adds.

Hart participated in a national mass shootings working group that drafted recommendations for gun control actions Biden should take during his first 100 days in office.

She says she appreciates that President Biden has taken executive action to tighten restrictions on pistol stabilizing braces and so-called ghost guns that are homemade with no serial numbers, and is pouring resources into community violence prevention programs.

However, these efforts fall short of his campaign pledge to ban assault weapons, enact universal background checks, and keep guns out of schools.

Hart is a proud vocal advocate for gun violence prevention. She says she will continue advocating for gun violence prevention for her daughter’s sake.