Kenney declared gun violence a public health crisis two years ago, launching the Roadmap to Safer Communities, which was updated in April. That declaration brought all city agencies together with the goal of reducing gun violence.
According to First Deputy Managing Director Vanessa Garrett Harley, agencies continue to meet on a weekly basis. Some approaches showed promise before the pandemic struck, she said, such as Operation Pinpoint, which was supposed to connect police patrolling crime “hot spots” with shared resources.
“We were beginning to see the shootings and homicides were starting to go down and we believed some of the tactics were really beginning to take hold and then the pandemic hit,” said Garrett Harley.
The city has also launched an injury prevention dashboard and homicide review team that looks at shooting deaths from epidemiological viewpoint to treat gun violence through a public health lens, like the COVID-19 pandemic.
City Councilmember Jamie Gauthier, whose district includes parts of West Philadelphia most affected by shootings, said Kenney is getting hung up on verbiage.
“He can call it whatever he wants,” said Gauthier, adding the city needs to act more urgently, something she’s been calling for for almost a year.
City agencies should be meeting on a daily basis, Gauthier said. She imagines a system where Parks and Recreation can keep facilities open as long as possible in neighborhoods struggling with violence the most. She said the Commerce Department should be able to lay out the number of job programs that are reaching people at most risk of participating in violence.
Under that kind of well-connected response system, Gauthier said the Department of Behavioral Health would be reaching victims’ families with resources the day of a shooting.