SYRACUSE, N.Y. – New York would ban teachers from carrying guns in school under a package of bills state legislators are expected to vote on Tuesday.

One of the bills would prevent schools from allowing anyone other than security officers, school resource officers or law enforcement officers to carry firearms on school grounds.

President Trump and the National Rifle Association called for teachers and staff to be armed after the 2018 Parkland, Florida shooting.

But Sen. Todd Kaminsky, D-Long Island, who sponsored the bill, said calls to arm teachers “ … are merely a distraction from urgently needed, common sense gun safety measures.”

Tom King, president of the state Rifle and Pistol Association, told the New York Daily News teachers should be allowed to carry guns as long as they are trained.

“This is a case of the Democrats coming in, running wild, writing bills on everything they can think of, and then trying to pass as much of it as they can,” King said.

Other bills in the gun control package would:

*Create criminal penalties for the sale and manufacture of devices that can increase the rate of fire of semi-automatic weapons, known as bump stocks. The gunman in the 2017 Las Vegas mass shooting used a bump stock, so his semi-automatic rifle fired like a machine gun. New York’s Safe Act gun control law bans the attaching of bump stocks to weapons. But it does not ban the sale or possession of the devices, which the new bill will do. The Trump administration late last year imposed a federal ban on the devices.

*Allow police, family, household members and school officials to seek a court order requiring a person likely to harm themselves or others to relinquish any firearms.

*Allow up to 30 days for a background check to clear before a gun must be delivered to a purchaser. The current law is three days when an instant check comes back inconclusive.

*Prohibit the possession, manufacturing, sale and distribution of guns that cannot be detected by standard metal detectors, including 3D printed guns.

*Create a Firearm Violence Research Institute within the state university system. It will be charged with studying gun violence, as well as education and training programs, and making recommendations to state officials for other potential laws controlling gun possession and use.