NEWTOWN, Conn. – A commission organized two years ago to review the Sandy Hook Elementary school shooting recently concluded its work and issued a 277-page report with recommendations for Gov. Dannel Malloy.

The document suggests dozens of recommendations focused on preventing another school massacre like the December 2012 shooting in Newtown that left 20 first-graders and six school employees dead at the hands of shooter Adam Lanza.

“Their deaths should mean something and should stand for something,” Malloy said last week, according to WTNH News 8. “I think your recommendations will make sure that that happens.”

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The Los Angeles Times reports that some of the suggestions are fairly simple, such as installing locks on classroom doors or requiring trigger guards with firearm sales, while others are much more complicated and costly.

“Among the Sandy Hook commission recommendations likely to face opposition: allowing ammunition purchases only for registered firearms; requiring people to renew their firearm permits at regular intervals; limiting the amount of ammunition that could be purchased at any given time; and requiring gun clubs to report ‘negligent or reckless behavior’ with a firearm to state officials,” according to the Times.

Other recommendations include outlawing firearms that can shoot more than 10 rounds without reloading and systematic improvements to mental health and behavioral health services throughout the state, WNPR reports.

“We must do something different. We must do something better,” Scott Jackson, chairman of the 16-member Sandy Hook Advisory Commission and mayor of Hamden, told the Times.

The commission presented their report to Malloy Friday.

Jackson told those in attendance that there have been more than 100 school shootings in the United States since the tragedy at Sandy Hook Elementary on Dec. 14, 2012, according to the Times.

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Malloy acknowledged that budget constraints could make it difficult to implement some of the suggestions, but opposition from Connecticut parents could be another obstacle.

One of the suggested changes would require some parents who remove their children from public schools to follow an “individual education program” approved by a special education director and to file progress reports with the state.

Homeschool parents banded together recently to form the Connecticut Parent’s Rights to lobby against the mandatory IEPs outlined in the report.

“All of us have joined together because we all believe our parental rights have been infringed and are continuing to be infringed and we won’t take it anymore,” Deborah Stevenson, attorney for the coalition, told News 8.

The IEP requirement would apply only to parents of children who transferred out of public schools with an IEP already in place, but homeschool parents oppose the measure as a means of imposing more regulations in the future.

Meanwhile, Hartford Police Chief Bernard Sullivan is urging Connecticut residents to read the report with the victims of Sandy Hook in mind, and to consider what was lost when Lanza opened fire on innocent children.

“Think of all the things in life they will never have an opportunity for, the education they won’t have the chance to get, the high school proms they won’t go to, the careers they won’t be able to have all because somebody decided that day to kill a whole bunch of people,” Sullivan said, according to WNPR.

“If people think about them when they read the recommendations you’ll have a better understanding of why we made the recommendations that we did.”