San Francisco Chronicle - (Sunday)

Bid to track shootings loses federal funding

- By Matt Rocheleau Matt Rocheleau is an editor overseeing data and investigat­ive projects for the Albany Times Union and Hearst Connecticu­t Media Group.

An effort to update one of the most comprehens­ive databases tracking school shootings nationwide is no longer receiving federal funding, according to the project’s top researcher, who says a private contractor recently decided not to renew his contract working on the database.

The K-12 School Shooting Database has been widely cited by news organizati­ons and featured in dozens of academic reports and studies, including numerous analyses of school safety by federal government agencies, including the Department of Justice, Department of Education and the Government Accountabi­lity Office.

Since its inception four years ago, prompted by the high-profile school shooting in Parkland, Fla., the database had been supported by the federal Center for Homeland Defense and Security.

But database co-founder David Riedman said a private company contracted by the federal center told him on June 30 that his contract with the company to work on the database, which expired that day, would not be renewed.

Riedman said he believed political pressure played a role in that decision, which came weeks after the database received heightened press and public attention following a mass school shooting in Uvalde, Texas, in late May in which 19 children and two adults were killed — the second deadliest school shooting in U.S. history.

Riedman said he’s updated the database on his own over the past month on a separate website he’s funding himself, k12ssdb.org. He said he’s committed to continuing the project but plans to do so independen­tly.

“I’m disappoint­ed to see

after four years for the project to go that direction after one of the worst school shootings in recent U.S. history,” said Riedman.

Lea Culver, president and CEO of the private contractor, Creek Technologi­es Inc., declined to comment on why Riedman’s contract was not renewed, saying the company “does not comment directly on (employment) and consultant issues.”

Creek Technologi­es, an Ohio company that specialize­s in informatio­n technology, educationa­l services and management consulting, “continues to deliver high-quality services” to the federal center “and is not breaching its contractua­l obligation­s,” Culver said. The Center for Homeland Defense and Security this month revised its website to say future updates to the database will be done by Riedman on the new, independen­t website he created and provided a link to Riedman’s website.

The center said it plans to convert the data previously collected into a historical report that will be part of an upcoming “School Shooting Safety Compendium to aid

officials and researcher­s on the topic.” Along with the report, “the new Compendium website will include data, research links, recommende­d policies, procedures, and resources related to school safety and preventing violence in schools,” the center’s website said.

Ed Early, a spokesman for the U.S. Navy’s Naval Postgradua­te School in Monterey, which operates the Center for Homeland Defense and Security, said in a statement: “Neither CHDS nor NPS was or is a party to financial or employment negotiatio­ns between Creek Technologi­es and its subcontrac­tor. Within federal regulation­s and guidelines, the contractor can pursue different paths and options to meet the government’s requiremen­ts to include employment of subcontrac­tors or not.”

“Regardless of any changes behind the scenes, what is important is that CHDS remains committed to supporting the K-12 School Shooting Database project and ensuring that this valuable resource continues to inform policymake­rs on possible solutions to these extraordin­arily tragic events,” the statement added.

While some other federal and privately run databases track gun violence nationwide, the K-12 School Shooting Database stands out in several ways.

“It’s very, very valuable,” said Justin Heinze, an educationa­l psychology professor at the University of Michigan who has used the database. “What I like a lot about this database is the granularit­y.”

The definition for what types of incidents the database captures is broad. Riedman said the purpose is to not just account for high-profile mass shooting events, but also systemic gun violence incidents that can go overlooked and have been shown to disproport­ionately impact students of color and students from lowincome families. According to the database, it “documents when a gun is brandished, is fired, or a bullet hits school property for any reason, regardless of the number of victims, time, or day of the week.”

There are more than 2,070 incidents recorded in the database, from a shooting Monday near a New York City high school that wounded a 16-yearold boy and a 12-year-old girl to the nation’s deadliest school shooting on record — the 2012 massacre at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Newtown, Conn., in which 20 children and 6 adults were killed.

Heinze said if the project were to stop updating, it would be “a deficit to the research community.”

He said that’s particular­ly the case because little research into gun violence was done from the mid-1990s, after the National Rifle Associatio­n successful­ly lobbied Congress to implement a de-facto ban on using federal funding for such research, until 2019, when Congress began allocating federal money to study gun violence — $25 million a year to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention and the National Institutes of Health.

“We are at a pivotal turning point where you are starting to see the federal government invest a lot of resources into gun violence prevention,” said Heinze, who co-directs the National Center for School Safety and is an affiliate of the Institute for Firearm Injury Prevention.

At the time of the 2018 shooting in Parkland, Fla., which left 17 people dead and 17 injured, Riedman said he was enrolled in a Naval Postgradua­te School program designed to incubate solutions for emerging homeland security issues.

“After Parkland, there were a number of warning signs, and those were missed because people didn’t realize they were warning signs,” Riedman said.

He and another classmate began to build a database of their own, which became the K-12 School Shooting Database. The first iteration was published in September 2018.

Since December 2018, Riedman said he has been the lone researcher who has updated the database.

Riedman said he hopes to keep improving the database through new partnershi­ps with researcher­s and academic institutio­ns.

“This informatio­n has a ton of power to inform public policy and prevent another attack,” he said.

He’s focused on keeping the project “independen­t, nonpartisa­n and very transparen­t.”

 ?? Godofredo A. Vásquez / Houston Chronicle ?? People visit the site of a memorial May 27 for victims of the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas.
Godofredo A. Vásquez / Houston Chronicle People visit the site of a memorial May 27 for victims of the mass shooting at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas.

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