SENATOR ART HAYWOOD
Gun Violence Prevention
Every two days, three people are murdered by guns in Pennsylvania. Gun violence tragedies are an unacceptable threat to our public health, and we must do our part to improve neighborhood safety. Senator Haywood supports efforts to ensure dangerous people do not have access to guns. He has introduced SB701 to limit the purchase of handguns to one person per month. The senator is also sponsoring legislation that would implement fingerprint handgun licensing in Pennsylvania. According to the John Hopkins Center on Gun Policy and Research, states with similar legislation have lower firearm-related death rates than those without such laws.
Join Us as a Gun Violence Prevention Advocate!
Sen. Haywood Encourages Groups to Apply for Violence Intervention Grants
September 7, 2022
6 DEMANDS FOR MAYOR KENNEY
TO REDUCE GUN VIOLENCE IN PHILADELPHIA
- Convene a decision-making gun violence committee, including 7 agencies, that meets WEEKLY
IN NEIGBORHOODS WITH THE HIGHEST LEVEL OF GUN VIOLENCE: - Create a “See Something, Say Something” media campaign
- Hire people in neighborhoods to clean up blocks
- Direct counseling, behavioral health & social services to affected families and youth
- Direct jobs & job training to affected youth in cooperation with employers & training programs
- Hire & provide grants to proven gun violence interveners to engage likely shooters
Gun Violence Prevention Strategies Webinar
April 8, 2022 at 10:20 a.m.
Watch Senator Haywood’s Gun Violence Prevention Strategies webinar below. The keynote speaker was Sal Martinez, Chief Executive Officer of Employment Connection of St. Louis. Mr. Martinez presented successful strategies used in St. Louis to reduce gun violence in 2021.
Gun Violence Prevention Resources
In case of Emergency, call the police by dialing 911
Mt. Airy – Fall 2022
Download PDF
VIOLENCE INTERRUPTION
PHILADELPHIA CEASEFIRE
– Contact Marla Bellamy at 215-806-8493 or [email protected]
GROUP VIOLENCE INTERVENTION (GVI)
– Contact Office of Violence Prevention at 215-686-0789 or [email protected]
PHILADELPHIA ANTI-DRUG/ANTI-VIOLENCE NETWORK (PAAN)
VIOLENCE INTERVENTION
MENTAL HEALTH
– Community Behavioral Health
• Call Eduardo Collazo at 215-413-3100
• For non-emergency services, call the 24/7 hotline at 888-545-2600
– Philadelphia Mobile Crisis
• Call 215-685-6440
SOCIAL SERVICES
– Department of Human Services ChildLine
• Call 1-800-932-0313
– Germantown Avenue Crisis Ministry (Financial Help,Energy/Utility Aid, Food Cupboard)
• Call 215-843-2340
– Philadelphia Domestic Violence Hotline
• Call 1-866-723-3014 or 1-866-SAFE-014
– Social Impact Cafe
• Contact Ericka Stewart at [email protected] or leave a message at 267-325-4226
COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT
ACTION FOR JUSTICE COLLECTIVE
– E-mail Michael Brown at [email protected]
TOWN WATCH INTEGRATED SERVICES (TWIS)
– Contact Anthony Murphy at 215-686-1459 or [email protected]
7GS
– Call 215-264-2886 or e-mail [email protected]
VIOLENCE INTERRUPTION
SURVIVOR ASSISTANCE
– Every Murder is Real (EMIR)
• Call 215-848-4068
– Northwest Victims Services
• Call 215-438-4410
BLOCK CLEAN UPS
– Philadelphia More Beautiful
• Call 215-685-3969
JOBS
– PA CareerLink® Philadelphia, Northwest
• Contact Dominique Butler-Jones at 215-987-6503
– Philadelphia Youth Network, Inc.
• Call 267-502-3800 or visit www.pyninc.org
MENTORING
– We Heard You
• Contact Cherese Akers at 267-940-7256 or [email protected]
– Urgent 365
• Contact [email protected] with questions or visit urgent365.org.
– Men Who Care of Germantown, Inc.
• Call 267-335-4786 or visit menwhocareofgermantown.org
Revised as of 8/2/22
Gun Violence Reduction Recommendations
The following recommendations were the result of meetings with Every Murder is Real (EMIR), Philadelphia Ceasefire (CureViolence), Mothers in Charge, CeaseFire PA, Moms Demand Action, Heeding God’s Call and my office.
01
Provide funding for youth mentoring programs that connect young people to caring adults who can provide guidance and counterbalance negative influences.
02
Provide funding for life skills training programs that strengthen youth’s ability to negotiate challenges and build a positive future. Life skills training must include:
- Understanding your emotions;
- Self-awareness;
- Breaking stereotypes and defying neighborhood expectations;
- Coping skills; and
- Identifying strengths vs. weaknesses.
03
Provide funding for conflict intervention and anger management training for at risk populations in schools and juvenile justice centers.
04
Provide support for victims of crime to prevent victims potentially becoming perpetrators.
05
Provide funding for counseling and interventions to victims and perpetrators of community violence at hospitals and emergency wards.
06
Work to break down antagonistic attitudes between citizens and police by posting positive police and community interactions via TV, social media, and YouTube.
07
Commit the City’s highest level of leadership to convening citywide anti-gun, anti-violence conference(s).
08
Create safe and lawful ways for youth to earn money and learn to work.
09
Expand access to job training and vocational training.
10
Promote anonymous mobile crime reporting application(s).
11
Increase support for cleaning and maintaining blighted land and buildings. Clean and safe environments can provide hope.
12
Make gun trace information available to the public.
13
Put more effort into investigation and prosecution of straw purchase of illegal gun sales.
Senate Democratic Request Disaster Declaration on Gun Violence
Establish a task force led by the Department of Health to create and implement a public health framework for addressing gun violence
Establish a command center in the Pennsylvania Emergency Management Agency to coordinate state and local law enforcement response
Enhance the Joint-Local State Firearm Taskforce through additional personnel and funding to take illegal guns off the street
Expand information gathering and sharing between all levels of law enforcement and community groups
Increase law enforcement presence, both local and state, in targeted areas where gun violence is most prevalent
Expedite and expand grants and other funding sources for community groups and nonprofit associations with a proven record of violence reduction and prevention
Provide additional state resources for behavioral and mental health
Bringing to bear the significant wealth of knowledge and experience in the Departments of Health and Human Services to provide de-escalation and de-confliction training throughout the community
Require the Pennsylvania Department of Education provide training and professional development on trauma-informed education
Legislation
Restrictions on the Sale and Purchase of Military Grade Weapons and Accessories
In the near future, I will be introducing legislation to put restrictions on the sale and purchase of military grade weapons and accessories.
According to Giffords Law Center to Prevent Gun Violence, a military grade weapon is defined as having the capacity to release a large amount of ammunition in a short amount of time all while the user keeps complete control of the weapon. Accessories to these weapons are added with the purpose of causing additional harm to the proposed target in a manner more efficient than before. Military grade ammunition can also be easily purchased, including body armor piercing bullets which are colloquially called “cop killers” on the streets. These accessories and others were made for no purpose other than taking the life of another human being.
Senate Bill 138 – Safe Storage of Firearms
Millions of children live in homes with easily accessible firearms. A 2018 study found that 4.6 million minors in the U.S. live in homes with at least one loaded, unlocked firearm. In fact, most children know where their parents keep their guns — even if their parents think otherwise.
From 2005 to 2014, roughly 20,000 American minors were killed or seriously injured in accidental shootings; the majority of those killed in these tragic accidents were aged 12 or younger. Child access prevention (CAP) laws are an important tool for reducing these preventable shootings. Twenty-seven states and the District of Columbia have enacted child access prevention laws – Pennsylvania isn’t one of them.
Senate Bill 90 – Extreme Risk Protection Orders
This legislation that will add Pennsylvania to the growing list of states that utilize Extreme Risk Protection Orders. This life-saving policy can help protect our communities from mass shootings, firearm suicides and other acts of gun violence.
An Extreme Risk Protection Order (“ERPO”) provides a mechanism for law enforcement and loved ones to request a Court order to temporarily restrict an individual’s access to firearms when they clearly present a danger to themselves and others. All requests for an ERPO must be based on the observations and safety concerns of local police officers, family members or other loved ones, all of whom are seeking the Court’s help with the goal of preventing firearm tragedies.
Senate Bill 88 – Universal Background Checks for Firearms
This legislation eliminates most of the exceptions to the requirement of a background check prior to the purchase or transfer of a firearm. The close familial transfer exception to the background check requirements would remain under this legislation. Senate Bill 209 was the product of continuing work on this issue with various stakeholders.
Currently, the Crimes Code requires firearm sales be conducted in front of a licensed importer, manufacturer, dealer, or county sheriff. However, this provision is only applicable to short-barreled firearms. Long barrel firearms, such as semi-automatic rifles, are not currently subject to these restrictions. This legislation would remove this applicability provision and require all firearm sales, regardless of the barrel length, be conducted in front of a licensed importer, manufacturer, dealer, or county sheriff.
Senate Bill 254 – Assault Weapons Ban
This legislation would enact an assault weapons ban in Pennsylvania. This bill would mirror language that is very similar to what was enacted in Connecticut after the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting, which is considered to be some of the toughest in the nation.
Under Pennsylvania law, both assault weapons and high-capacity magazines are legal. There was a federal ban on these types of weapons nationwide which began in 1994. However, the Federal Assault Weapons Ban expired in 2004 and the sunset provision was never renewed. For the 10 years that the injunction was in effect, it was illegal to manufacture the assault weapons for use by private citizens. The law also set a limit on high-capacity magazines – these could now carry no more than 10 bullets. However, any weapon or magazine that was manufactured before the law went into effect in 1994 was perfectly legal to own or resell.
Haywood on Gun Violence Prevention
Who investigates police killings in Pennsylvania, and why there are few checks and balances
In Pennsylvania, elected district attorneys determine whether or not to charge officers who kill or use force against civilians. There is little recourse should anyone disagree with the decision. After state police troopers shot and killed 19-year-old Christian Hall...
The final moments: Videos show Christian Hall, 19, had his hands up when police fatally shot him
A Chinese American teenager who was fatally shot by Pennsylvania State Police last year had his hands in the air when troopers opened fire, new videos reveal, prompting calls for an independent investigation. The videos, recorded by the State Police, show the final...
Who investigates police killings in Pennsylvania, and why there are few checks and balances
In Pennsylvania, elected district attorneys determine whether or not to charge officers who kill or use force against civilians. There is little recourse should anyone disagree with the decision. After state police troopers shot and killed 19-year-old Christian Hall...
Who investigates police killings in Pennsylvania, and why there are few checks and balances
In Pennsylvania, elected district attorneys determine whether or not to charge officers who kill or use force against civilians. There is little recourse should anyone disagree with the decision. After state police troopers shot and killed 19-year-old Christian Hall...
Pennsylvania teen had his hands up when fatally shot by State Police, new videos show
STROUDSBURG, Pa. — A Chinese American teenager who was fatally shot by Pennsylvania State Police last year had his hands in the air when troopers opened fire, new videos reveal, prompting calls for an independent investigation. The videos, recorded by the State...
Christian Hall, 19, had his hands up when police fatally shot him, videos show
STROUDSBURG, Pa. — A Chinese American teenager who was fatally shot by Pennsylvania State Police last year had his hands in the air when troopers opened fire, new videos reveal, prompting calls for an independent investigation. The videos, recorded by the State...