Santa Fe New Mexican

Guns to plowshares: S.F. buyback repurposes old firearms

Despite disagreeme­nt over whether events reduce violence, they can provide educationa­l opportunit­ies for people

- By Margaret O’Hara mohara@sfnewmexic­an.com

An unusual kind of drivethrou­gh appeared on Santa Fe’s south side Saturday morning.

As if their drivers were waiting to order from a busy fast food restaurant, cars lined up down the block, inching toward the Santa Fe Municipal Court’s parking lot.

When they entered the lot, though, the drivers were dropping something off — not receiving a meal. They opened their trunks to reveal caches of firearms — pistols, rifles, shotguns.

After turning over the weapons to police, the drivers continued on their way, now armed with gift cards of up to $250 per gun relinquish­ed.

It was the 18th “Guns to Gardens” buyback sponsored by New Mexicans to Prevent Gun Violence, said Miranda Viscoli, the organizati­on’s co-president. Put on in partnershi­p with the city of Santa Fe, the Santa Fe Police Department and the First Judicial District Attorney’s Office, the event was intended to collect unwanted guns and render them unusable — before repurposin­g the scraps into gardening tools, musical instrument­s and more.

“Our anonymous survey shows the majority of people who are participat­ing do so for safety reasons — a teenager with suicidal ideation, a wife whose husband was a hunter [and] now has dementia, a lot of people inherit guns,” Viscoli said.

She added, “So this gives everybody that opportunit­y to get rid of that unwanted firearm.”

District Attorney Mary Carmack-Altwies was on gift card duty Saturday morning. She darted between the line of cars, handing out gift cards to Target, Amazon, Walmart and other ubiquitous retailers after the drivers had surrendere­d their guns.

The line, the district attorney said, indicated there was “pent-up demand” for a safe spot to get rid of firearms.

“If it saves one life — if it keeps one person from harming themselves or others — then it is absolutely worth it,” Carmack-Altwies said.

There is some disagreeme­nt over whether gun buybacks actually reduce incidences of gun violence. One review of the research conducted by RAND noted empirical evidence on the effectiven­ess of gun buybacks is “limited and mixed at best,” in part because of the difficulty of measuring the impacts of local programs, but the events can serve as opportunit­ies to educate residents about safe firearm usage and storage.

Viscoli said she believes in buybacks — and she’s heard from participan­ts for whom they made a big difference. It assures them that the weapons will never hurt anyone.

“People are so filled with gratitude,” Viscoli said. “They know that the minute they drive off, that gun is under the blade of a chop saw.”

As drivers circled through the Santa Fe Municipal Court parking lot Saturday, police officers removed any ammunition from the surrendere­d guns and checked a database to ensure the firearms weren’t stolen.

From there, the guns went to a small team of volunteers for decommissi­oning. Using chop saws, they made at least three cuts in three different locations on each weapon.

“By the time we’re done, we’ve rendered them useless.

... They can’t be used as parts. They become scrap material,” said Jeremy Thomas, one of the volunteers.

That scrap material, however, will be reused. Thomas teaches blacksmith­ing students at RFK Charter School in Albuquerqu­e to transform pieces of the weapons into functional objects.

Pieces of many of the guns collected Saturday will eventually be sold as gardening spades, hoes and mattocks — the proceeds from which go toward the purchase of buyback gift cards, Viscoli said. Students have even repurposed parts of the weapons to build a functional xylophone and electric guitar.

“As I work with those students, it’s really talking to them about how everything has potential,” Thomas said. “And a firearm ... as a firearm has one potential. But once we make it raw material, it has a different potential.”

 ?? ??
 ?? PHOTOS BY JIM WEBER/THE NEW MEXICAN ?? LEFT: Officers German Mena, from left, Jake Parrish and Deputy Chief Ben Valdez collect guns and check to make sure they aren’t loaded during a gun buyback event Saturday at the Santa Fe Municipal Court hosted by New Mexicans to Prevent Gun Violence, the Santa Fe Police Department and First Judicial District Attorney’s Office.
ABOVE: Sparks fly as volunteer John Stearns cuts up a handgun during the gun buyback event Saturday.
PHOTOS BY JIM WEBER/THE NEW MEXICAN LEFT: Officers German Mena, from left, Jake Parrish and Deputy Chief Ben Valdez collect guns and check to make sure they aren’t loaded during a gun buyback event Saturday at the Santa Fe Municipal Court hosted by New Mexicans to Prevent Gun Violence, the Santa Fe Police Department and First Judicial District Attorney’s Office. ABOVE: Sparks fly as volunteer John Stearns cuts up a handgun during the gun buyback event Saturday.

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