Chicago Sun-Times

Proposal nowbefore the Legislatur­e could help stemflowof guns to be used in crimes

- Send suggestion­s about ways to curb gun violence to letters@ suntimes. com.

The news of the weekend was dominated by coverage of the killing of 10 people, mostly teenagers, at a high school in Santa Fe, Texas.

But who are we kidding here in Chicago?

More people than that were shot dead in our city in the last week or so, and it was an ordinary thing, like a budgeted cost of living in the big city.

For every person killed in Chicago, many more are wounded. On Thursday, 11 people were shot. On Wednesday, nine. The day before, eight. Earlier this month, almost 40 people were shot in just three days.

Of all the dozens of possible ways to slow the bloodshed in Chicago from a gush to a trickle, one of the biggest “small” solutions would be a state certificat­ion requiremen­t for gun shops— a proposal now before the Legislatur­e.

The bill’s odds of becoming law are shaky, but not beyond hope, and this is exactly where you might be able to make a difference. Call your state representa­tive, especially if he or she has a lousy record on sensible gun laws, and give them an earful.

You can add your name to a petition in support of the bill, being circulated by the Illinois Gun Violence Prevention Coalition, by going to ilgvp. com and clicking on “# OurOneJob Petition.”

And contact the governor, too. There’s an election coming up.

The gun shop certificat­ion bill got a boost on Tuesday when a revised version passed out of the state Senate just one vote shy of a veto- proof majority. Next, the House ought to pass this bill, and then Gov. Bruce Rauner should sign it, though he has signaled that he won’t.

Maybe Rauner would think differentl­y if one of his many homes were located in Englewood or on theWest Side.

Most gun shops in Illinois sell few or no guns that eventually turn up at crime scenes in Chicago. But a handful of shops sold hundreds of such “crime guns” from 2013 through 2016. Why should we let them sell hundreds more?

Creating an Illinois certificat­ion for gun shops would empower state authoritie­s to insist that those shops adopt policies, such as training employees and preventing easy burglaries, that would slow the flow of firearms into the hands of criminals.

Responsibl­e gun shops already take practical steps to prevent “straw purchases,” which are transactio­ns in which somebody who legally can buy guns does so for somebody who cannot because of a criminal record or mental illness.

Good gun shops use video surveillan­ce to track who is buying guns. Straw purchasers are spotted. Bad gun shops see no evil.

On Thursday, Rauner said a gunshop certificat­ion process would increase bureaucrac­y without increasing public safety. That is nonsense. We can only assume the governor has never read a city of Chicago report released last year showing that just two suburban gun shops sold 1,673 of the guns used in crimes in Chicago from 2013 through 2016.

Or, to look at it another way, each of those two shops sells a future crime gun, on average, almost every day and half that they’re open for business.

Gun dealers in Illinois, as in all states, are required to get federal licenses, but the federal government doesn’t really paymuch attention. If a gun shop, for example, fails to keep an electronic inventory of its guns or install credible anti- theft protection­s, the feds pay nomind. State certificat­ion, however, would allow local law enforcemen­t officials to hold accountabl­e the handful of shops that are pipelines to criminals.

We are urging passage of this bill as part of our “31 bullets” campaign, in which this month we are identifyin­g 31 concrete ways we can all work together to reduce gun violence in Illinois and across the nation. In Bullet 13, we single out the problem of “bad apple” gun dealers. Want to take action on that issue? Go to 31bullets. suntimes. com to find out how.

Last month, just before the Republican primary election in which he was fending off a staunchly pro- gun challenger, Rauner vetoed an earlier version of the gun shop certificat­ion bill. Instead of trying to override the governor’s veto, state Sen. Don Harmon, D- Oak Park, and other legislator­s rewrote it to gain more bipartisan support.

The revised bill reduces the certificat­ion process’ red tape, directs the Illinois State Police to track Firearm Owners’ Identifica­tion Card checks in gun sales to trace patterns of straw purchases, and creates penalties for gun sellers who ignore the requiremen­t to keep records of sales for 10 years.

State certificat­ion of gun shops is one small— but utterly doable — part of the solution to gun violence in Chicago and all of Illinois.

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 ?? JUSTINJACK­SON/ SUN- TIMES ?? Police investigat­e a shooting around midnight Saturday in the 7200 block of South Euclid.
JUSTINJACK­SON/ SUN- TIMES Police investigat­e a shooting around midnight Saturday in the 7200 block of South Euclid.

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