The Jerusalem Post

NY Gov. Cuomo issues first-in-nation disaster emergency on gun violence

- • By CHRIS SOMMERFELD­T

NEW YORK (New York Daily News/TNS) – New York Gov. Andrew Cuomo declared gun violence a statewide “disaster emergency” on Tuesday as part of a wide-ranging plan aimed at cracking down on illegal guns and gangs amid a troubling surge in shootings.

The disaster emergency order is the first of its kind in the US and allows the state to quickly allocate money and other resources to areas of New York where gun violence is running rampant, Cuomo said at John Jay College of Criminal Justice in Manhattan.

The order comes less than two weeks after New York’s disaster emergency on COVID-19 expired, and Cuomo pressed the case that gun violence is on a par with the pandemic and must also be treated as a public health crisis.

“If you can beat COVID, you can beat gun violence,” the governor said. “We’re in a new epidemic, and it’s gun violence, and it’s a matter of life and death also.”

Cuomo’s action came on the heels of a rash of shootings in New York.

Fifty-one people were shot across the state over the July Fourth weekend, including 26 people in New York City alone, according to police data. In contrast, Cuomo said, 13 New Yorkers died from COVID-19 in that same time frame.

From a bird’s eye view, shootings are up by 38% in the city in the first six months of 2021 as compared to 2020, Cuomo said.

To deal with the violence, Cuomo’s

emergency disaster declaratio­n puts into motion what he called a comprehens­ive seven-tiered plan.

For starters, Cuomo’s plan requires major police department­s across the state, including the NYPD, to share incident-level data on gun violence on a weekly basis with a newly formed state Office of Gun Violence Prevention. The prevention office will then track emerging trends and deploy state resources to those “hot spots” accordingl­y.

Cuomo’s order frees up a total of $138.7 million for gun violence interventi­on and prevention programs, according to a fact sheet from his office.

More than $75m. of that cash will be spent on creating jobs and community activities for at-risk youth, with the goal of keeping them from joining gangs and engaging in criminal activities.

According to Cuomo’s office,

21,000 such jobs will be rolled out this summer, with commitment­s from the Metropolit­an Transporta­tion Authority, the NYC Hospitalit­y Alliance and New York State Parks, among other entities.

“We’re losing young people, we’re losing them tragically and we’re losing them needlessly,” Cuomo said, noting that young New Yorkers – especially those of black and Hispanic descent – are statistica­lly far more likely to be shot than white residents.

New York already has some of the US’s strictest weapons laws, but as part of his Tuesday announceme­nt, Cuomo also signed a couple of new gun control bills passed by the legislatur­e earlier this year.

The first bill makes it easier to sue gun manufactur­ers and dealers if they’ve sold, marketed or produced firearms in a way that endangers safety. The second measure makes it illegal for anyone with an outstandin­g warrant to purchase a firearm in New York, closing a loophole opened under the Trump administra­tion.

On an enforcemen­t front, Cuomo is ordering state police to form a gun traffickin­g task force focused on stopping illegal guns from being smuggled into New York from southern states. The task force will work with police department­s in other states to share gun traffickin­g data and intelligen­ce.

Cuomo said 74% of guns used in crimes in New York were purchased out of state, making the issue especially pressing.

“We know where they’re coming from – they’re coming from the south – and we’re going to declare a border war to stop them,” Cuomo said before taking a not-so-subtle jab at former president Donald Trump’s obsession with building a wall on the US southern border: “Illegal immigratio­n is not killing Americans. Illegal guns are killing Americans.”

In attendance were several members of the state Senate and Assembly, providing the governor with a show of support as he remains under fire in Albany over his alleged sexual harassment and coronaviru­s mismanagem­ent scandals.

Earlier in the day, New York City Mayor Bill de Blasio painted a rosier picture of gun violence.

“Comparing June of 2021 to June of 2020, shootings down almost 20%,” de Blasio said, citing data that did not take into account that shootings overall are up this year. “But a lot more work to do.”

 ?? (Jeenah Moon/Reuters) ?? NEW YORK Gov. Andrew Cuomo (center) and supporters pose for photos earlier this week.
(Jeenah Moon/Reuters) NEW YORK Gov. Andrew Cuomo (center) and supporters pose for photos earlier this week.

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