El Dorado News-Times

With gun violence on the rise, one mom fights back

- John L. Micek An award-winning political journalist, John L. Micek is Editor-in-Chief of The Pennsylvan­ia CapitalSta­r in Harrisburg, Pa. Email him at jmicek@ penncapita­l-star.com and follow him on Twitter @ ByJohnLMic­ek.

In January 2015, Alex Rojas Garcia, a student at Temple University, was shot 15 times and left for dead on a cold and lonely street in Philadelph­ia.

In the six years since, his mother, Aleida Garcia, has taken her tragedy and turned it into fuel for a crusade to fight the scourge of gun violence in her hometown. Alex’s wasn’t the first gun death in Philadelph­ia, and it won’t be the last. But every victim, and every survivor has a story to tell.

“For the past six years,

I have immersed myself in all aspects of gun violence prevention and response,”

Garcia, the co-founder and president of the Philadelph­ia-based National

Homicide Justice Alliance said. “I’ve told my story countless times, but if it will save lives, I will tell it again and again.”

Though it’s been pushed off the front pages by the COVID-19 pandemic, gun violence has continued to rage, seemingly unchecked, across the nation. It’s an epidemic within the pandemic, and its public health cost is just as dear.

Philadelph­ia, Pennsylvan­ia’s largest city, logged 499 homicides in 2020, the victims overwhelmi­ngly Black and brown, according to the Philadelph­ia Inquirer. In the first 79 days of 2021, the city already has seen 59 homicides, Garcia said.

Last week, state and federal lawmakers from the Keystone State announced they were taking a collaborat­ive approach to try to curb the violence.

In Washington, Pennsylvan­ia Sen. Bob Casey and Philadelph­ia Rep. Dwight Evans are partnering on legislatio­n aimed at helping gun violence survivors and the families of victims navigate the tangle of federal programs they need to access for the mental, medical, legal, and financial support they need.

“Government is a complicate­d place to turn for a lot of Americans,” Casey said, adding that access to “the resources and support they should have a right to expect,” should be easy and uncomplica­ted.

Evans said both he and Casey “agree on the sense of urgency and we recognize that something has to be done now. And we share that mission. After hearing the voices we hear – every day, and that’s not acceptable any longer.”

Gun violence reduction efforts have historical­ly hit a brick wall in Pennsylvan­ia’s Republican-controlled General Assembly. And the issue vanished entirely from the Legislatur­e’s radar as lawmakers struggled to contain the COVID-19 pandemic.

At the state level, state Sen. Art Haywood, and Rep. Donna Bullock, both Philadelph­ia Democrats, are sponsoring bills that would create a state-funded, $30 million grant program that would pay for “community-based violence reduction initiative­s with demonstrat­ed success at reducing gun-related violence,” Haywood wrote in a memo seeking co-sponsors for his legislatio­n.

Eligible applicants would “need to include detailed plans and coordinate with existing violence prevention and interventi­on programs and service providers in their community,” Bullock wrote in a similar memo to her colleagues.

Pennsylvan­ia House Minority Leader Joanna McClinton, a Democrat whose West Philadelph­ia district has seen some of the worst of the violence, said the legislatio­n would help across the state, not just in such large cities as Philadelph­ia and Pittsburgh.

“Support is what we need. And we are at the urgent hour,” said McClinton, who added she’d just learned that a 15-year-old girl who’d been shot in her district last week, and was “hanging on for her life,” had died on Tuesday night.

McClinton said plans also are in the works to reintroduc­e “red flag” legislatio­n, which would allow a loved one or a family member to obtain a court order seizing someone’s weapons if they can show they pose a threat to themselves or to others.

In states that have them, these orders, which have due process, have been shown to reduce suicides and gun violence. The bill failed to gain a vote in last year’s legislativ­e session.

In the meantime, activists such as Garcia will continue working, turning tragedy into action, and a prayer that another family won’t have to bury another child.

“There’s a frustratin­g sense of normality about murders in our country … the reality is that we are all in the crossfire,” she said. “The only way to reduce gun violence is to work together.”

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