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Remembering the Pulse nightclub shooting 3 years later

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Three years after the June 12 mass shooting at Pulse nightclub in Orlando, Florida, lawmakers are proposing plans to designate the nightclub a national memorial.

U.S. Reps. Darren Soto and Stephanie Murphy, both from Central Florida, announced their plan to declare Pulse a federal landmark at a service in front of the temporary memorial Monday. The designation, they hope, will nationally honor the 49 victims of the deadliest act of violence against LGBT people in the history of the country.

If passed, the bill would classify the memorial as part of the National Park System but allow local nonprofit OnePulse Foundation to retain control of its construction, Soto said. He plans to pass the legislation by June 2020.

"This will give this hallowed ground the federal recognition it deserves, especially for those who lost everything."

In the early hours of June 12, 2016, Omar Mateen shot and killed 49 people and injured more than 50 others during the club's Latin night, claiming allegiance to ISIS. The incident marked the deadliest mass shooting in the U.S. until one year later, when 58 people were murdered at a Las Vegas country music concert.

A temporary memorial at the club opened in May 2018, but club co-owner and foundation CEO Barbara Poma told CNN affiliate WFTV she plans to start building a permanent site by 2021.

As a nationally recognized memorial, the project would be eligible to receive federal and private funding. Poma said the foundation's raised $14 million of its $45 million goal for construction, most of which the county pledged.

"This is an important step to preserve an LGBT historic landmark at a time when many of these sites are being destroyed," Soto said. "The memorial will serve as a reminder of the remarkable way our community came together to heal and overcome hate."