Morning Briefing
Summaries of health policy coverage from major news organizations
Mass Shootings Boost Calls For Federal Gun Safety Measures
Gov. Gavin Newsom angrily denounced Republicans for refusing to adopt gun safety measures as he renewed calls for federal action after two mass shootings in California left 19 people dead. Newsom also called out fellow Californian, House Speaker Kevin McCarthy, for not making a public statement after the shootings in Monterey Park and in Half Moon Bay. 鈥淲here鈥檚 he been on gun safety reform? Where鈥檚 the Republican Party been on gun safety reform?鈥 the governor said, appearing visibly shaken after meeting with families of victims of the second shooting. 鈥淪hame on them. Shame on those that allow and perpetuate that to be rewarded politically.鈥 (Korte, 1/24)
State political leaders reacted with horror and demanded Congress help pass a ban on assault weapons and other gun-safety legislation after a series of mass shootings 鈥 including Monday鈥檚 in Half Moon Bay and Oakland 鈥 claimed the lives of 19 Californians over three days. 鈥淲here has the Republican Party been on gun-safety reform? They鈥檝e blocked it every step of the way,鈥 Newsom told reporters in Half Moon Bay on Tuesday. 鈥淕un safety works, we will not back away from the resolve. But we can鈥檛 do this alone, and with all due respect, we feel like we are.鈥 (Gardiner, 1/24)
President Biden renewed his call for an assault weapons ban on Tuesday following a shooting in Half Moon Bay, Calif., that left several people dead. 鈥淓ven as we await further details on these shootings, we know the scourge of gun violence across America requires stronger action. I once again urge both chambers of Congress to act quickly and deliver this Assault Weapons Ban to my desk, and take action to keep American communities, schools, workplaces, and homes safe,鈥 Biden said in a statement. (Gangitano, 1/24)
California鈥檚 efforts to reduce gun violence have long been a point of pride among the state鈥檚 liberal lawmakers. But a sense of futility and despair infused the response of many political leaders Tuesday in the bitter aftermath of three mass killings in as many days. At least 19 people have been fatally shot in mass attacks since Saturday evening, when a 72-year-old gunman here opened fire inside a dance studio popular with the elderly Asian American community. Eleven people died in this city on the edge of Los Angeles, and then on Monday, two shootings in the Bay Area killed eight others. (Wilson, Berman and Thebault, 1/24)
More details are released 鈥
The shooting rampage Monday in Half Moon Bay that left seven people dead appears to be a case of workplace violence, law enforcement officials said. The gunman allegedly targeted specific co-workers in the coastal agricultural community in San Mateo County. 鈥淭he only known connection between the victims and the suspect is that they may have been co-workers,鈥 San Mateo County Sheriff Christina Corpus said at a news conference Tuesday. 鈥淎ll the evidence we have points to this being the instance of workplace violence.鈥 (Hernandez, Rust, Petri, Money and Castleman, 1/24)
The Half Moon Bay mushroom farm worker suspected of killing seven co-workers in a fit of workplace rage had previously been accused of threatening to split another co-worker鈥檚 head open with a knife and trying to suffocate the man a decade ago at another Bay Area job, according to court records obtained by The Chronicle. (Gafni, Hagemann and Moench, 1/24)
As the investigation into the Monterey Park mass shooting continues, police officials are facing scrutiny over how long it took them to notify the public that the gunman was still on the loose. For roughly five hours after 72-year-old Huu Can Tran opened fire inside Star Ballroom Dance Studio on West Garvey Avenue and fled late Saturday night, Monterey Park and Los Angeles County authorities made no announcements about the gunman鈥檚 location. (Winton, Fry, Mejia and Goldberg, 1/24)
Also 鈥
Three shootings with multiple victims shook California over the last few days. The shootings Monday at two farms in Half Moon Bay, Calif., closely followed a massacre over the weekend at a dance hall in Monterey Park, Calif. That's no surprise, say scientists who study mass shootings. Research shows that these incidents usually occur in clusters and tend to be contagious. Intensive media coverage seems to drive the contagion, the researchers say. (Chatterjee, 1/24)
For parents, guardians and educators, the days following mass shootings require a delicate balance of answering children鈥檚 questions while protecting them from gruesome details of the most recent tragedy. Despite their young ages, kids are often resilient in the face of hardship, but that doesn鈥檛 mean they aren鈥檛 scared too as they hear news of killings in Goshen, Monterey Park and Half Moon Bay. (Newberry and Cosgrove, 1/24)