The Times Herald (Norristown, PA)

Philadelph­ia and rising homicides

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Philadelph­ia’s homicide rate is rising, fast.

In 2018, 351 homicides were recorded — the most since 2007.

Since the last election in 2015, homicides increased 25 percent. Police Commission­er Richard Ross attributes the increase to drugs. The number of drug-related homicides doubled between 2013 and 2015, from 30 to 60, and then again by 2018, to 120.

Two curiositie­s: Over the same time frame, overall crime has been decreasing — 11 percent since 2015. More strangely, shootings have been increasing at a slower rate, rising only 10 percent at the same time that homicides increased by 25 percent.

In 2017, for example, Philadelph­ia saw the fewest shootings in the past five years — 1,220 — but the second highest homicides — 315.

At the same time that Philadelph­ia’s homicide rate is increasing, other large cities — including Chicago, infamous for its high murder rate — reported declines, according to an analysis by the Brennan Center.

The homicide rate in Philadelph­ia has seen sharp increases and decreases in the past.

Between 2012 and 2013, homicide dropped by 25 percent — from 331 to 248.

At the same time, the U.S. overall experience­d the lowest homicide rate in decades in 2013.

What can a mayor do about it? In January, the Mayor’s Office published the Philadelph­ia Roadmap to Safer Communitie­s.

Most of the programs outlined are not revolution­ary — expanding job training, intelligen­ce-led policing, cleaning vacant lots, and raising awareness.

A few weeks before its release, the city Office of Violence Prevention published a review of the 40 city-funded violence-prevention programs. They found programs do not target those most at risk and that the city significan­tly overestima­ted how much money it spent on violence prevention.

There is a generation­al aspect to violence that can’t be ignored — poverty, lack of opportunit­y, access to guns, and environmen­tal hazards are factors.

But one big lever is out of the hands of the city: Gun control measures must happen at the state level — and little action has been taken.

What more can be done in the short term?

The city could be doing a better job vetting programs that receive funding and in making more funding available. Investment in research is also needed; deaths could be prevented, for example, if we knew more about why the number of shootings fluctuates while the number of homicides steadily increase.

What are long-term solutions?

No candidate — for mayor or City Council — has suggested any cure-all policy for Philadelph­ia’s shootings and homicides problem.

Probably because there isn’t one.

Only long-term investment in eradicatin­g poverty, addiction, offering mental-health services, containing illegal drug markets and ensuring opportunit­y for everyone will reduce violence in Philadelph­ia.

— The Philadelph­ia Inquirer, The Associated Press

There is a generation­al aspect to violence that can’t be ignored — poverty, lack of opportunit­y, access to guns, and environmen­tal hazards are factors. But gun control measures must happen at the state level — and little has been done.

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