Santa Fe New Mexican

Firearm homicide rate in ’20 highest since ’94

- By Mark Berman

The surge in gun violence across the United States in 2020 pushed the firearm homicide rate that year to its highest level in a quarter-century, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention reported Tuesday.

This rise in fatal shootings affected communitie­s nationwide, but there were wide gaps across racial, ethnic and economic lines, with the increases in 2020 broadening already existing disparitie­s, the CDC found.

In a new report, the CDC said the spike in deadly gun violence was “not equally distribute­d” in 2020.

“Young persons, males, and Black persons consistent­ly have the highest firearm homicide rates, and these groups experience­d the largest increases in 2020,” the report found. “These increases represent the widening of long-standing disparitie­s in firearm homicide rates.”

The report comes as communitie­s across the country have been struggling with an increase in gun violence since 2020. In some cities, the bloodshed is well below what they saw a generation ago, while other communitie­s have experience­d record numbers of killings.

In its new report, the CDC examined how rates of deaths involving guns shifted in 2020, the first year of the pandemic. What emerged was alarming: The firearm homicide rate that year was higher than in any year since 1994.

The age-adjusted firearm homicide rate “increased substantia­lly” in 2020, the CDC found, rising to 6.1 per 100,000 people from 4.6 a year earlier.

The report’s findings were grim and consistent, with increases seen across the board. Firearm homicide rates went up in every region of the country and in every age group.

About 4 in 5 homicides in 2020 involved firearms, the CDC report said, as did a little more than half of all suicides. Both figures were slightly up from the five previous years.

In a separate report released last month, the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions similarly documented a nationwide spike in the firearm homicide rate in 2020, calling it “the largest one-year increase in modern history.” That report also said despite this surge, “the gun homicide rate is still lower than it was in the early 1990s.”

While the increase in gun violence over the last two years has been well documented, the CDC’s report examining 2020 underscore­s the harrowing toll this has taken nationwide — and which groups were hit the hardest when shootings went up.

In 2019, the report says, the firearm homicide rate for Black boys and men between the ages of 10 and 24 was

20.6 times the rate among white boys and men in that age range. By 2020, that disparity had grown, with the rate among Black men and boys in that age group being 21.6 times the rate for white men and boys.

“When you really look at who this is impacting, it’s really that we’re losing too many of our nation’s children and young people, specifical­ly Black boys and young Black men,” Debra Houry, the CDC’s acting principal deputy director, said in an interview before the report’s release.

Black people and American Indian or Alaska Native people had the highest firearm homicide rates in 2020 as well as the largest increases over the year before, the report found.

While the firearm suicide rate “remained relatively unchanged” in 2020 from the year before — rising to 8.1 per 100,000 people from 7.9 per 100,000 people in 2019 — there were stark increases among younger people and some racial and ethnic groups, including Hispanic people, Black people and American Indian or Alaska Native people.

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