New York Post

Apple shootings in ’23 down over 25%

- By CRAIG McCARTHY, BERNADETTE HOGAN and STEVE JANOSKI

Mayor Adams took a victory lap Monday after the Big Apple saw a more than quarter drop in shootings from last year, as he outlined his administra­tion’s $485 million plan to cut the gun violence that has remained stubbornly high in the post-pandemic era.

Dubbed the “Blueprint for Community Safety,” the plan is the product of a year-old task force charged by Adams with finding the “root causes of gun violence” and listing safety recommenda­tions, according to a city press release.

“Our time has arrived, and now we have to get something done,” Adams said at a Monday press conference, flanked by Gov. Hochul and other elected officials.

“There’s a small window of opportunit­y to bring the level of aggressive­ness that we need, interventi­on and prevention.”

As of Sunday, the city has endured 592 shootings this year, lower than the 805 in the first seven months of last year, but about 34% higher than the 2019 total of 441 shootings in the same span.

Asked what specific metrics the public could use to judge the success of the blueprint, Adams replied: “Hold us accountabl­e. We are all in this together. It’s not just me. It’s not the folks here. It is the men and women of the media highlighti­ng some of the good things we’re doing, lifting up those people who are participat­ing.”

The mayor noted that cops have pulled 11,000 firearms off the streets since he took office in 2022 and that, in addition to a drop in shootings of about 26% when compared to the first seven months, homicides have dipped, too.

But despite the congratula­tory back-patting, gun violence has remained a persistent problem.

And although the city has committed hundreds of millions of dollars to the task force’s recommenda­tions, only about $40 million of that will be new spending.

Initiative­s

That money will go toward paying to keep some schools open for community use, youth job training and employment and data collection to evaluate the effectiven­ess of the programs, among other things, City Hall said.

The plan also puts aside $118 million for early-interventi­on initiative­s; $57 million to improve housing; $68 million to help New Yorkers access public benefits; $9 million to invest in public spaces such as parks, playground­s and community centers; $118 million for skill training for young city residents; $106 million to bolster mental-health programs; and $2.6 million to fund community policing, the release said.

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