The Denver Post

The Post Editorial Guns kill too many Denver kids

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Denver needs to get serious about youth gun-violence prevention. Too many of our kids are dying every year at the end of a gun. Far too often that gun is fired by another teen whose life will also be shattered by that bullet.

The Denver Post’s Elise Schmelzer exposed the problem when she uncovered statistics from the Denver Police Department that indicate things might be getting worse. In 2018 and so far in 2019, 15 teenagers and children in Denver have died from gun homicides. Comparativ­ely, in 2015, Schmelzer reported there were two kids under the age of 20 who were shot and killed, five in 2016 and four in 2017.

This is a rallying cry for our youths, the general public and our elected officials to start prioritizi­ng this issue, which overlaps with other issues including teen suicides and school shootings. We must protect our kids from guns.

It can be done if we start making stopping gun violence a priority.

Jonathan Mcmillan has been on the front lines of working with Denver’s youth gang problem, and he says part of the problem is simply awareness.

“One of the things that frustrates me and that I find challengin­g is that unless it’s a mass shooting, a lot of times youth gun violence flies under the radar,” Mcmillan said. “Those shootings always spark a conversati­on, one that needs to be had, but last year I had seven or eight kids that I had known … killed or involved in a shooting in some capacity. This is really the daily reality that a lot of families or communitie­s are dealing with.”

So while most readers know the name of a student who was killed this year in a Highlands Ranch school shooting, few will probably recognize the name Darrell Mitchell, a 19-year-old who was shot and killed in Denver last month.

It’s time we make the conversati­on surroundin­g the violent gun deaths of all teens equally as robust.

The good news is that we don’t have to start from scratch. Mcmillan knows there are dozens of groups doing good work in this field.

Denver Public Health released a report this month that said between 2012 and 2017 there were a total of 74 deaths due to gun violence among Denver youths who are under 25 years old. Of those, 27 were suicides and 47 were homicides.

“These are stable and unacceptab­le rates,” said the Denver Public Health director, Dr. Bill Burman. “We should not as a community have to have 13 deaths a year and 700 youths affected by gun violence. Those are unacceptab­le.”

Burman said Denver Health’s Mile High Youth Thrive coalition, which has been around for years, is working on recommenda­tions right now that focus on efforts to approach this issue from an incrementa­l public health standpoint which have proven effective in other communitie­s. We look forward to that work.

But we’d like to see the city of Denver and Denver Public Schools using their collective might to get behind such an effort too: Their police, social workers, teachers and other employees are after all at the forefront of this issue and already doing good work. They are the ones who can bring our youths into the fold before tragedy strikes and patients arrive at Denver Health or teens arrive at the county jail.

Burman said some cities have developed a goal of not losing a single kid to guns in a year. That should be Denver’s goal.

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