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Wednesday, Jun 15 2022

Full Issue

McConnell Gives Nod To Bipartisan Gun Deal

Attempts to tighten federal gun laws gained momentum Tuesday after Minority Leader Mitch McConnell lent support to the deal publicly, though negotiations are ongoing and leading Republicans signaled they would examine the final law in detail. Other gun violence news is also reported.

A tentative bipartisan deal to toughen federal gun laws picked up momentum in the Senate on Tuesday after Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.) lent public support to a framework that negotiators released this week. McConnell鈥檚 backing provided further evidence that the current round of gun-law negotiations, which kicked off after last month鈥檚 deadly shooting inside a Texas elementary school, might just have what previous attempts at bipartisan compromise did not 鈥 sufficient GOP support to overcome a filibuster. (DeBonis, 6/14)

One day after the mass shooting of 19 children and two teachers in Texas, Kyrsten Sinema held a rare off-the-cuff press gaggle where she vowed to talk to Republicans about a gun safety deal. The Arizona Democrat didn鈥檛 waste any time after those remarks. She then marched onto the Senate floor to ask Minority Leader Mitch McConnell and his deputy, John Thune, which Republicans she needed to talk to. The GOP duo replied to her: John Cornyn and Thom Tillis. (Everett and Levine, 6/14)

In other updates on the gun violence epidemic 鈥

In the three weeks since a gunman killed 19 children and two teachers at a Uvalde elementary school, Gov. Greg Abbott has declined to use the power of his office to call a special session, form commissions or issue executive orders to address school safety or gun violence. Instead, the governor has issued eight directives imploring other Texas officials to take action, from conducting school safety assessments to promoting technology to report suspicious behavior. It鈥檚 a strategy that political experts say is substantive 鈥 but does not nearly represent the extent of the governor鈥檚 authority or influence. 鈥淎s governor, he is the chief administrative officer of the state, and all the state agencies fall under his administrative purview,鈥 said Cal Jillson, a political science professor at Southern Methodist University. 鈥淔or the governor to be instructing various agencies to take a part in the response to gun violence and the Uvalde shooting is perfectly reasonable. But on another level, it is 鈥 as always in Texas 鈥 a minimalist response.鈥 (Harris, 6/15)

Iowa will spend聽$100 million聽of federal funding to prevent聽school shootings, Gov. Kim Reynolds announced Tuesday. The funds will be used to conduct vulnerability assessments on schools, provide active shooter training, hire additional staff at the Department of Public Safety and create new pathways to report and monitor threats of violence. Schools, both public and private,聽will also be eligible for up to $50,000 each to improve the security of their buildings. (Akin, 6/14)

In an effort to curb shootings and make going to and from school less dangerous for students, Philadelphia officials announced they will spend $1.8 million on installing security cameras near city high schools and middle schools in high crime neighborhoods. Standing outside the John Bartram High School in Southwest Philadelphia, where a 17-year-old student was fatally shot in January after leaving campus, Mayor Jim Kenney and other city leaders said at a news conference Monday they hope the cameras will make criminals think twice about committing shootings around a school. (Hutchinson, 6/14)

Ohio law has long prohibited local governing bodies like city councils from passing laws restricting guns, but could the Columbus Board of Health take action on firearm safety?Columbus City Attorney Zach Klein floated that聽idea at the city Board of Health's May 17聽meeting, but did not propose specific policies that the board could adopt. "We have taken it upon ourselves to look at loopholes and exceptions in the way that perhaps the legislature left wiggle room for the City of Columbus to act," Klein, a Democrat like other city leaders,聽said during the May meeting. "Where we think there's opportunity is actually in the regulations that can be passed from the Board of Health," Klein said. "But what those are, are to be determined." (Laird, 6/15)

Many people have noted a common thread between the recent mass shootings in Buffalo, New York, and Uvalde, Texas: In both cases, the attackers were 18 years old and bought AR-style, semi-automatic rifles legally. The perpetrators in two other mass shootings in the past four years also were younger than 21 when they purchased the semi-automatic rifles they used in their attacks. In February 2018, a 19-year-old former student killed 17 people and injured 17 others at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida. And in April 2021, a 19-year-old shooter killed eight people and injured seven at a FedEx warehouse in Indianapolis. (Vasilogambros, 6/14)

California officials have agreed to pay $51 million to settle lawsuits against the state stemming from a shooting at a home for veterans in Northern California where a former patient fatally shot three female mental health workers and then himself. On March 9, 2018, Albert Wong, 36, took hostage three staffers with The Pathway Home, a nonprofit that operated a program at the Veterans Home of California in Yountville. The nonprofit treated veterans of the Iraq and Afghanistan wars with post-traumatic stress disorder. (6/15)

This is part of the Morning Briefing, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.
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