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Gun ban change is only the start

Council's choice to drop handgun law was no choice at all, and the results won't be limited to just Evanston

Berlin, Kyle

Issue date: 7/17/08 Section: Forum
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In considering the city council's recent decision to drop the city-wide handgun ban, the word that first comes to mind is astute. Astute, of course, in both the political and financial sense. The city is able to save money on a lawsuit it almost certainly would have lost, and the decision will also placate gun owners in the area and those around the nation who are watching to see how these early test cases pan out. Even the most ardent pro-gun activists must acknowledge that the city council had little choice but to do what they did. An NRA spokeswoman said the organization would "absolutely" pursue its lawsuit all the way to the Supreme Court.

I consider it my duty, as a responsible and caring Evanston resident and American citizen, to voice my concerns at the outset of this decision about the safety of my fellow citizens. I urge the city council and municipalities around the country, when faced with the same decision, to maintain the most stringent gun control laws that pass constitutional muster. An ever-growing volume of research shows that rates of gun ownership are directly correlated with rates of gun injuries and fatalities. Louisiana, Alaska, Montana, Tennessee and Alabama, the five states with the highest number of gun fatalities per capita, had an average gun ownership rate of 54 percent, according to a 2005 study by the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Their average gun death rate per 100,000 people was 17.26, well above the overall average of 10.32. In contrast, the five states with the lowest number of gun fatalities per capita had an average gun ownership rate of 13 percent. Their average number of gun deaths per 100,000 people? 3.92.

And the gun deaths will not be limited to homicides, said Kristen Rand, the legislative director for the Violence Policy Center, a non-profit organization concerned with lowering gun-related deaths and injuries. Rand ticked off the things that would rise if handgun bans were dropped around the country: "suicide, domestic homicide, police being confronted with guns on domestic calls, unintentional injuries." Studies by the Harvard School of Public Health have consistently found that gun availability is a risk factor for youth suicide and that the number of firearm-related suicides is directly correlated with regional gun ownership rates. Rates of unintentional injuries and fatalities also correlate in the same manner.

It is likely that Evanston will not see very many short-term effects of the new ordinance. Even Rand acknowledged that in affluent suburbs with low gun ownership rates like Evanston, "the risks to the community are fairly low." Instead, the effect will be probably be small and occur further down the road - light ripples in this big nation, almost unnoticeable. They'll make headlines in local newspapers; they already do. A young kid accidentally shoots another, a lover's quarrel ends in gunshots, a dejected teenager decides in a moment of intense passion to end his life. And families will mourn their bad fortune, and in their zeal to uphold an anachronistic amendment, pro-gun activists will continue to fight for more guns for more people.

As for the city council, it played the hand it was dealt. And in this case, the astute decision was to fold. Only time will tell how this all plays out.

k-berlin@northwestern.edu
Page 1 of 1

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Viewing Comments 1 - 10 of 19

Johnk568

Johnk568

posted 7/17/08 @ 12:01 PM CST

Howdy,

See my other post in the story about your city counsil. You missed the point and that is the Washington DC ban violated yours and my right to own and use a firearm in the defence of our families and ourselves. (Continued…)

Simon

posted 7/17/08 @ 1:52 PM CST

Kyle, I highly suggest that you look up the real facts behind the statistics that you are quoting. I bet you didn't know that half of all gun-related deaths are suicides, did you know. (Continued…)

Jason P.

posted 7/17/08 @ 2:34 PM CST

Kyle,

Seems like you made a visit to the Violence Policy Center website and did some reading. I too have read the same brief published by the VPC. (Continued…)

Kevin

posted 7/17/08 @ 2:54 PM CST

Unfortunately, I couldn't disagree with you more about the correlation between guns and crime - I would speculate that numerous other social factors, such as racial tensions, poverty and a lack of national identity tend to cause the high gun-related deaths in states with high firearm ownership. (Continued…)

Matthew

posted 7/17/08 @ 3:15 PM CST

It's easy to talk about fatalities when we don't have to talk about the causes of those deaths. How do your facts compare to the situation of the highest crime rates existing in cities and states which have the strictest gun-control laws? Chicago has had strict gun control for 40 years, is the only state in which total bans can be found, and is one of two states which does not allow for concealed-carry of handguns. (Continued…)

Gene

posted 7/17/08 @ 3:29 PM CST

I would suggest that anyone who uses the VPC as a source for stats should realize that they are funded by the Joyce Foundation, Chicago IL, who funds virtually every gun control group in the country!

For verification, go to the Joyce Foundation web site:

http://www. (Continued…)

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

Matthew

posted 7/17/08 @ 3:30 PM CST

It's easy to talk about fatalities when we don't have to talk about the causes of those deaths. How do your facts compare to the situation of the highest crime rates existing in cities and states which have the strictest gun-control laws? Chicago has had strict gun control for 40 years, is the only state in which total bans can be found, and is one of two states which does not allow for concealed-carry of handguns. (Continued…)

(1 reply)   Details   Reply to this comment

DonP

posted 7/17/08 @ 3:51 PM CST

Kyle, please!

Using the VPC for statistics is like relying on Santa Claus to clear up your acne.

It's the wrong source for that particular problem. (Continued…)

Ol'Coach

Gene

posted 7/17/08 @ 4:04 PM CST

Suicide rates?

The World Health Organization reports the following suicide rates/100,000 people for the year 1999:

United States............17.6
Australia. (Continued…)

WP Zeller

posted 7/17/08 @ 4:11 PM CST

Dear Sir:
The VPC is not concerned with reducing violent crime. The VPC is concerned with getting the personal ownership of firearms made illegal.
Please note that the policies endorsed by the VPC and their sibling-in-lawmaking the Brady Campaign result in higher, not lower, violent crime rates. (Continued…)

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