Road map for reducing teen gun violence remains unfulfilled
WILMINGTON, Del. — Even in a city that had become almost numb to gun violence, Wilmington’s record-setting 154 shootings in 2013 proved to be a tipping point.
Desperate city leaders reached out for help to end the cycle of violence, and the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention agreed to investigate. It was a rare move for an agency more typically known for studying disease outbreaks or causes of obesity.
Two years later, the CDC published what remains its only report about gun violence in a single American city. It warned that Wilmington’s rate was at “epidemic levels” and recommended a long list of steps for the city and state to follow. The former governor created a 25-member council charged with developing a plan to implement the recommendations.
Despite that early momentum, most of the CDC suggestions remain unfulfilled even as gun violence continues to plague the city and claim young lives.