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The Philadelphia Inquirer
The Philadelphia Inquirer
National
Mensah M. Dean

Mothers of murder victims join to demand Philadelphia do more to combat gun violence

PHILADELPHIA — As gun violence continues its toll on Philadelphia, mothers who have lost children to bullets have come together to demand that city officials do more to stop the shootings and killings.

Calling themselves the Mother’s Movement, the women are founders and members of several existing organizations gathered at City Hall on Thursday morning with a list of demands.

“We have not been united as one voice on this issue. We believe if that happens we’ll be heard in a way that we have not been heard before,” said Dorothy Johnson-Speight, who founded the nonprofit group Mothers in Charge after the 2001 murder of her son in a dispute over a parking space.

“We will be pulling the men in, but we’re starting off with women because we are the ones who carry these children and nurture these children and bury these children,” said Movita Johnson-Harell, who founded the CHARLES Foundation, a non-profit that focuses on helping at-risk children, after losing two sons to gun violence.

In addition to the CHARLES Foundation and Mothers In Charge, the Mother’s Movement is composed of women from Every Murder is Real, Mothers Bonded by Grief, Mothers United by Angels, the Sultan Jihad Ahmad Foundation, the Jarell Christopher Seay Love and Laughter Foundation, and the National Homicide Justice Alliance.

The group called on Mayor Jim Kenney to declare a gun violence emergency in the city, as some City Council members have suggested, but he has resisted. The mayor has said such a declaration would have little effect on curbing the crisis and that the benefits supporters say it might bring — unlocking resources, better governmental coordination and drawing attention to the problem — are already happening in Philadelphia.

“A disaster or emergency declaration would have no discernible impact on strengthening what is already a highly collaborative and innovative approach to addressing this public health crisis,” the mayor’s spokesperson Kevin Lessard said Thursday.

Johnson-Harrell said she believes Kenney’s reticence is rooted in a desire to protect the city’s tourism industry.

She pointed to the mass shooting on South Street earlier this month that killed three and injured 11. That incident in one of the city’s popular tourist spots drew prompt response from law enforcement and visits to the neighborhood by the mayor and Police Commissioner Danielle Outlaw.

“I think the city puts dollars over Black and brown communities every day. Look at the response that South Street got,” Johnson-Harrell said. Violence in other communities, she said, has not drawn the same attention.

The 562 homicides in Philadelphia last year were the most in the city’s history, while the 246 slayings so far this year are close to the number the city saw at the same time last year, according to data from the Philadelphia Police Department.

As it seeks ways to curb violence, the Mother’s Movement asked city officials to put in place a 10 p.m. curfew for those under the age of 18, a measure that City Council is expected to approve as early as today.

The group also asked that recreation centers in communities with high rates of gun violence be open daily from 8 am to 8 pm, and be provided with police protection and trained violence prevention counselors.

The women urged that any unspent violence prevention money from last year’s city budget be channeled to community-based organizations with proven track records of success. And they want the city to provide more funding to violence interrupter programs, including those run by the University of Pennsylvania and Temple University.

Lessard said the city has already been working with local and national partners, including the Department of Justice, in an effort to make the city safer without deepening the historical impacts of systemically racist policies such as over-policing and mass incarceration.

“The budget we’ve agreed to with City Council, which is scheduled for a final vote (Thursday), dedicates more than $200 million to anti-violence efforts, as we’re investing in what we know to be proven practices to get at the long- and short-term issues,” Lessard said.

Some of that funding will go to the city’s Anti-Violence Community Expansion Grant Program, which funds and supports community-based organizations that are focused on reducing violence through trauma-informed healing, restorative practices, safe havens and mentorship, he said.

“We are also advocating to the public and in the courts about the state’s dereliction of duty and the gun lobby’s role in fueling the deaths in our city,” Lessard said.

In 2020, the city sued the state saying the state law that prevents the city from enacting laws to regulate guns is helping to fuel the gun-violence crisis.

Johnson-Harrell said the Mother’s Movement wants to be an ally of the city in working to combat violence.

“We’re going to try to work with them,” she said. “ ... These are our children dying every day. We need collaboration and coordination.”

City Council member Jamie R. Gauthier, who represents parts of West Philadelphia and University City and has previously asked the mayor to declare a gun violence emergency, said she supports the Mother’s Movement agenda.

“Under the direction of the mayor, all city agencies should be meeting daily to discuss the work that is happening, understand what is working and communicating that work regularly to the public,” she said.

“This is what an emergency approach could look like. I hope that hearing the cry of these strong, passionate women will inspire our city to prioritize gun violence as the city emergency that it is.”

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