Chicago Sun-Times

Chicago has long way to go when some young men are at greater risk than military personnel

-

Some Chicagoans live in neighborho­ods where gunfire is so rampant, they liken their surroundin­gs to a war zone.

Residents in the West Side’s 60624 ZIP code wouldn’t be inflating the truth if they made that proclamati­on. It would be an understate­ment, particular­ly when it comes to the dangers young men face, a new study funded by the National Institutes of Health found.

The risk of men between the ages of 18 and 29 losing their lives in a shooting in this part of the city is higher than the death rate of U.S. soldiers who fought in Afghanista­n or Iraq. Of the three other cities researched — Philadelph­ia, New York and Los Angeles — only Philadelph­ia has neighborho­ods where the chance of a deadly encounter was higher than in recent military action overseas.

Yet the death rate is worse in the 60624 ZIP code, which includes Garfield Park, as the Sun-Times’ Frank Main points out in his story on the study.

Our city is about so much more than gun violence. But it’s no surprise that crime remains a top concern of Chicagoans as they prepare to vote in another mayoral election.

Their worries are motivated by the urgency to find solutions that will strengthen our overall sense of security. This latest report is another reason to keep those concerns front and center, for candidates and for the next mayor.

The city has started treating crime as a public health crisis, which the study researcher­s suggest. Additional­ly, they stress that violence-reduction programs and trauma-informed care should be the focus.

Street outreach and victim support services, including trauma-informed aid for survivors of violence in the West Garfield community, are currently being funded by the Chicago Department of Public Health.

That is not the only way the city is helping, we’ve been told.

The Community Safety Coordinati­on Center also recently launched an Emergency Supplement­al Victims Fund in five communitie­s, including the area cited in the study.

Providing financial assistance to relatives of fatal shootings and those who have been injured in them is crucial. But the end goal is to stop the shootings from taking place in the first place.

The city must keep moving forward with its initiative­s in prevention as well as victim support. Those initiative­s must undergo rigorous scrutiny — to find out what works, what doesn’t and why.

No Chicagoan should live in a community that’s worse than a war zone.

 ?? TYLER PASCIAK LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES ?? Chicago police at the scene where a man was fatally shot in West Garfield Park on Sept. 2.
TYLER PASCIAK LARIVIERE/SUN-TIMES Chicago police at the scene where a man was fatally shot in West Garfield Park on Sept. 2.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States