Pulse night club shooting survivors and gun reform advocates are teaming up and preparing to load buses for the rallies in Tallahassee Wednesday.

"It's time it's time for things to change," said local UCF PhD student and gun reform advocate David Moran.

This June will mark two years since a man walked into Pulse nightclub with a semi-automatic assault weapon and killed 49 people.

Among those who died were two of Moran's close friends.

"It's a loss that's always present. It's something that doesn't just go away... You have to learn to live with it," Moran said.

While coping, he created a local chapter of Gays against Guns. He headed to Tallahassee and rallied for change in gun legislation, advocating for a ban on assault weapons like the one used at Pulse.

However, since Pulse, the gun legislation he was hoping for didn't pass.

Then last week, 17 students and teachers were killed at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, with a different man who walked into the school with the same style gun.

"Yes, it's going to keep happening until you do something to change it," Moran said.

They are demanding change, because they told Spectrum News 13 they are tired of tragedies like the one at Pulse Night Club and now Parkland, and don't want to see it happen again.

"We will be there helping deliver petitions to Governor Rick Scott and other elected officials," Moran said.