Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Gun violence costs Santa Clara County $72 million, according to public health report

- Tribune News Service Bay Area News Group

Santa Clara County incurs $72 million in costs associated with gun violence every year, according to a newly released report by the Department of Public Health.

The report, which investigat­ed gun violence incidents going back to 2000, measured the impact on the county’s medical and mental health infrastruc­ture, emergency services and law enforcemen­t.

The data did not include costs associated with incarcerat­ion or to the private sector.

Much of the gun violence in the county are suicides, which account for 60 percent of the deaths over the last two decades. Thirty-four percent are from assaults or homicides, while the remaining 4 percent come from law enforcemen­t interventi­ons. Males make up 89 percent of all firearm deaths.

Geographic­ally, gun violence in is most concentrat­ed in East and South San Jose, as well as in Campbell. While firearm deaths have remained stable over the last decade, visits to the emergency room for nonfatal incidents have tripled.

The findings come as the county’s supervisor­s look to reign in the proliferat­ion of ghost guns and the Bay Area at large experience­s alarming rates of gun violence.

In March, Supervisor­s Cindy Chavez and Otto Lee proposed an ordinance that would ban the possession of ghost guns, which law enforcemen­t continue to seize in record numbers.

Since 2015, the number of ghost guns examined by the county’s crime lab has grown from just four to 293 last year, according to separate findings released in conjunctio­n with the gun violence economic impact report.

“I requested the study to better understand the financial impacts of gun violence on our county and the numbers are staggering,” said Chavez in a statement. “I look forward to addressing the illegal firearms trade in our community.”

Santa Clara County has roughly 550,000 firearms, according to the report. The area has roughly two million residents. Between 2017 and last year, about 28,000 guns were registered annually.

The report comes as the Bay Area, the state and the country grapple with gun violence. In April, a shooting in downtown Sacramento left 10 people dead and another 12 injured. And at the end of the month, San Jose will commemorat­e one year since a shooting at a Valley Transporta­tion Authority building where nine agency employees died.

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