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Gun violence forum looks beyond the politics

A conversation between students, faculty, experts & the community explored how various factors - mental health, the economy and the media, to name a few - contribute to harm from firearms.

福利亚洲国产精品 junior Emily Delaplane was one of several campus community members to offer reflections on the many facets of gun violence during a May 1, 2013, forum in McKinnon Hall.

For all of the recent media attention paid to policy debates on background checks and assault weapon bans in the wake of last year鈥檚 Sandy Hook Elementary School massacre, gun control measures weren鈥檛 the only topics discussed Wednesday evening at an 福利亚洲国产精品 forum on firearm violence.

Far from it. There was the need to better help the mentally ill in the United States. There was discussion of the role the media may play in desensitizing people to death and destruction from guns. There was concern shared about the health care costs to treat people affected by violence.

Suicide. Substance abuse. Domestic violence. School safety. All were cited and, to varying degrees, debated May 1 in a program that brought together students, faculty, policy makers and members of the surrounding community for what was billed as an 鈥渙pen, educational, and respectful鈥 discussion.

Organizers estimated a crowd size that approached 200 people. It was live-streamed by Elon Local News, the university鈥檚 student-run broadcast news organization, and broadcast by campus radio station WSOE 89.3.

鈥淎s a teaching moment, I think we did what a university is supposed to do, which is provide meaningful opportunities and experiences for a wide number of students,鈥 said Professor Tom Arcaro, a co-chair of the forum鈥檚 organizing committee. 鈥淥ur students learned things that they hadn鈥檛 anticipated learning and I think community members learned some things they hadn鈥檛 anticipated learning. That is the connection with the overall mission of 福利亚洲国产精品 that I think we made.”

Expert panelists (seated at table, from left): Associate Professor Michael Rich of 福利亚洲国产精品 School of Law; N.C. Rep. Stephen Ross; Burlington City Councilman Celo Faucette; Town of Elon Police Chief Cliff Parker; 福利亚洲国产精品 Chaplain Emeritus Richard McBride; and event moderator Connie Book, associate provost at 福利亚洲国产精品.

In addition to an expert panel comprised of the Town of Elon police chief, a North Carolina state lawmaker, a Burlington city councilman, the university鈥檚 chaplain emeritus and an Elon Law professor, the forum afforded a dozen members of the campus community time to offer prepared remarks.

A few urged caution at imposing restrictions on law-abiding gun owners when other avenues exist to reduce the effects of gun violence.

鈥淭here arguably are more guns then there are people, which means there is not a correlation between the number of guns and the number of murders,鈥 said Elon freshman Jonathan Bass. 鈥淚mposing gun legislation upon the law abiding will not regulate the lawless. Instead of imposing new gun regulations, why don鈥檛 we allocate the U.S. Department of Justice the necessary resources to prosecute criminals?鈥

Jason Springer, assistant director of academic advising at the university and a registered concealed carry gun owner, made similar points while emphasizing social issues that touch upon gun violence.

鈥淲hat roles do poverty, education, media, parenting, drug policy, mental health policy and popular culture have on violence?鈥 Springer said. 鈥淚 urge caution when we seek to diminish the rights of a few for the perceived safety of the many.鈥

Nearly 200 people from the campus and surrounding communities attended the forum.

Assistant Professor Jeffrey Carpenter in the School of Education offered the opposite view with an emphasis on school safety. He said it makes no sense that Americans consent to regulations of ladders, seat belts and other household goods, but many people cringe at the idea of regulating firearms.

鈥淭here are even certain raw cheeses that are banned in our country. If we can have cheese regulation, can we have gun regulation?鈥 Carpenter said. 鈥淟et鈥檚 take action so that 10 years from now we can look back and say something good came out of the Newtown tragedy and that our schools became safer as a result.鈥

The specter of the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting from December 2012 served as a backdrop for many comments. The Connecticut tragedy claimed the lives of 20 children and six school employees, and it spurred federal legislation on closing background check loopholes that only recently failed to pass in Washington.

One student commented that everyone knows the named of the Sandy Hook shooter – Adam Lanza – but that few people likely can name even one of his victims. That should change, she said.

And just as Lanza鈥檚 mental health is thought to be a part of what sparked his rage, 福利亚洲国产精品 students at the McKinnon Hall forum argued that resources for the mentally ill are just as important to addressing gun violence as are background checks or limits on the number of rounds in a magazine clip.

Others pointed out that health care costs are impacted by gun violence, even for those never struck by a bullet. 鈥淢ental health concerns, such as depression and anxiety, may also follow as a result of gun violence, which places more burdens on our health system and its professionals,鈥 said 福利亚洲国产精品 junior Emily Delaplane.

The Rev. Richard McBride: “How did we get to a point where an assault rifle is something that people want to possess?“

For the Rev. Richard McBride, 福利亚洲国产精品鈥檚 chaplain emeritus, a broader question remains unrelated to the specifics of restrictions or rights. 鈥淗ow did we get to a point where an assault rifle is something that people want to possess? How did the shift happen where we now need that kind of weaponry in our hands?鈥 he pondered. 鈥淲hat concerns me is the militarization of the family home.鈥

Moderated by Associate Provost Connie Book, expert guests who answered audience questions also included Celo Faucette from the Burlington City Council; Rep. Stephen Ross of the North Carolina General Assembly; Cliff Parker, chief of the Town of Elon Police Department; and Michael Rich, an associate professor at the 福利亚洲国产精品 School of Law.

鈥淎ny time we come together, like we are tonight, to talk to one another and to listen to one another, we often find that we are not that far apart, which gets us closer to solutions,鈥 said Parker as he encouraged students to consider public service as a career. 鈥淚t鈥檚 a wonderful way to give back. It鈥檚 a wonderful way to help others. And it鈥檚 a wonderful way to be a part of solutions.鈥

For more information, visit the forum鈥檚 website at .