Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Harrisburg isn’t off the hook on gun violence

After four long years, and at a time Philadelph­ia needs it most, there is an occupant in the White House who understand­s the value of gun control.

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While President Joe Biden has taken action on gun control, bill after bill languishes in the GOP led state Legislatur­e.

Last week, the White House announced initial actions the administra­tion is taking to address gun violence. Unable to impose gun control requiremen­ts through executive action, the White House instructed the Department of Justice to draft a model “red flag” law for states to use and craft a federal law enforcemen­t response to the proliferat­ion of “ghost guns.” The plan calls for $5 billion toward a violence interrupti­on program.

President Joe Biden also nominated David Chipman, a former Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives agent who most recently was a senior adviser for the gun control group Giffords, to head the ATF — an agency that didn’t have a confirmed director since 2015. Biden has also directed the ATF to issue an annual report on gun traffickin­g.

Biden called gun violence an “epidemic” and “internatio­nal embarrassm­ent” at a Rose Garden press conference where he discussed his administra­tion’s action.

Also last week, more than a dozen of Philadelph­ia’s top federal law enforcemen­t officers announced a new initiative to address gun violence.

At a press conference alongside Philadelph­ia Police Commission­er Danielle Outlaw, acting U.S. Attorney Jennifer Arbittier Williams announced that each one of the federal agencies will do more to support the work of the city’s police: FBI is adding more agents and intelligen­ce analysts to investigat­e violence, ATF will support the Philadelph­ia Police Department’s forensic laboratory and will track down more leads, and the U.S. Attorney’s Office will prosecute more gun cases.

The focused collaborat­ion among law enforcemen­t agencies, local and federal, is a welcome developmen­t.

Just a few weeks ago, a leaked police memo showed a district captain instructin­g his officers to conduct more car stops and to issue more code-violation notices. Hopefully, the spirit of the new collaborat­ion and focus on gun violence will trickle down through the department and more resources will be dedicated toward gun violence, and not minor traffic stops.

The new tone from the White House and federal agencies gives hope, but the announceme­nts also revealed the limits of executive action.

Through his pen, Biden can tinker around the edges when it comes to actually regulating guns. The president called on Congress to pass the Violence Against Women Act, ban assault weapons, and close background check loopholes. With 60 votes required to break a filibuster in the Senate, it’s hard to imagine 10 Republican­s letting any of these measures pass.

Republican obstructio­nism doesn’t stop in D.C.

Bill after bill to reduce the number of guns on Pennsylvan­ia’s streets, and out of the hands of individual­s who are a danger to themselves or others, are introduced in Harrisburg, only to languish in Republican-led committees.

Meanwhile, Pennsylvan­ia’s background check system experience­d record volume for the third consecutiv­e quarter: 427,450 checks before purchase, more than 100,000 more than the first quarter of 2020. The commonweal­th is drowning in guns.

Gun violence is indeed an internatio­nal embarrassm­ent and a national tragedy. There is finally national leadership to promote change — but Congress and the statehouse must act.

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