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- <text id=91TT1313>
- <title>
- June 17, 1991: Firearms:Chicago's Uphill Battle
- </title>
- <history>
- TIME--The Weekly Newsmagazine--1991
- June 17, 1991 The Gift Of Life
- </history>
- <article>
- <source>Time Magazine</source>
- <hdr>
- NATION, Page 30
- FIREARMS
- Chicago's Uphill Battle
- </hdr><body>
- <p>As housing officials mop up illegal weapons, the N.R.A. has a
- novel solution to crime in the projects: more guns
- </p>
- <p>By ALEX PRUD'HOMME--Reported by Nina Burleigh/Chicago and
- Elizabeth L'Hommedieu/San Francisco
- </p>
- <p> There are few innocents in Chicago's violent public
- housing projects. Children who live in the 19 complexes
- scattered around the city regularly witness random shootings and
- brutal deaths. One of the first things they learn is to hit the
- deck when gunfire erupts. Playing in the courtyard of the Henry
- Horner Homes--a 21-building project made infamous by Alex
- Kotlowitz's book There Are No Children Here--Meeka Boyd, 11,
- described the shooting of a young man on a basketball court that
- she saw last year. Her friend Netisha Stroger, also 11, saw a
- girl shot in the leg on the playground. "When it's real hot out,
- it's real bad," says Netisha. "That's when people start
- shooting, and you can't go outside. It's scary."
- </p>
- <p> The statistics are certainly frightening. Police say one
- innocent bystander is shot at every day in the projects, one is
- hit by gunfire every week, one is killed every month. Last year
- Chicago's public-housing complexes saw 72 murders, the vast
- majority involving firearms; in the first four months of this
- year, the toll was already 36.
- </p>
- <p> To curb the violence, the Chicago Housing Authority has
- begun to enforce a 20-year-old rule forbidding tenants to keep
- guns on its premises. Since 1988, when Vincent Lane was named
- C.H.A. chairman, Operation Clean Sweep has sent teams of police
- and housing-authority guards to conduct surprise searches for
- weapons, drugs and illegal residents in project buildings. In
- 1989 Secretary of Housing and Urban Development Jack Kemp
- praised Clean Sweep as a "model for the rest of the country."
- The operation has posted impressive results so far: the police
- confiscated 817 weapons last year and 214 in the first three
- months of 1991. But faced with a flourishing drug trade and an
- illegal-arms bazaar, the C.H.A. is fighting an uphill battle.
- </p>
- <p> Now that struggle is being made even more difficult by the
- National Rifle Association. Last month the N.R.A.'s deputy
- general counsel, Robert Dowlut, charged that the C.H.A.'s gun
- ban infringes on residents' constitutional right to bear arms.
- The N.R.A. maintains that law-abiding residents need guns to
- protect themselves from criminals. Furthermore, it says, because
- most of Chicago's public-housing residents are black, a ban on
- guns would have a "disproportionate impact on persons of African
- heritage"--a particularly offensive argument since virtually
- all the victims of project shootings are also black.
- </p>
- <p> While the N.R.A. has yet to sue the housing authority,
- Richard Gardiner, director of the gun lobby's state
- government-relations division, says a future lawsuit is
- possible. Among other possibilities, he adds, is "using
- legislation to prohibit housing authorities from putting such
- ((antigun)) provisions in place."
- </p>
- <p> The N.R.A.'s protest has infuriated Chicago's housing
- officials. C.H.A. chairman Lane calls the N.R.A.'s protest an
- "intrusion on public-housing residents. Clearly they are not the
- N.R.A.'s constituency. Eighty percent of the residents are
- single mothers, with children, on welfare. I can tell you they
- are not out hunting pheasant or taking target practice. The only
- use of weapons in the housing projects is for negative reasons."
- And Ira Harris, chief of the housing police, blisters the N.R.A.
- for attempting to focus the debate on the question of race. Says
- he: "They have never cared about black people before."
- </p>
- <p> The illogic--some would say hypocrisy--of the N.R.A.'s
- position is underscored by the fact that there has been little
- visible support within the project for its initiative. On the
- contrary, members of the Mother's Guild, a tenants' advocacy
- group at the Henry Horner Homes, strongly favor the gun ban.
- Though guild member Hazel Holmes has been robbed several times,
- she says she does not want a gun for protection. "I was raised
- in Mississippi, and my father had hunting guns around the
- house," she explains. "But he always [said] that guns are not
- for killing humans."
- </p>
- <p> Another irony in the N.R.A.'s stance is that while it
- claims to be upholding the constitutional rights of the C.H.A.'s
- 150,000 authorized tenants, most of the firepower seems to be
- in the hands of illegal occupants. Police estimate that 80% of
- the crime in the projects is caused by 50,000 to 70,000
- unauthorized residents, often gang members who move in with
- their girlfriends or take over empty apartments.
- </p>
- <p> The Chicago dispute is not the first time the N.R.A. has
- attacked such gun bans. A similar measure in Portland, Ore., was
- defeated in 1988 when both the state attorney general and the
- N.R.A. objected. When a federal judge upheld a Richmond ban on
- guns in public housing last December, N.R.A. lobbyists swung
- into action; in April the state legislature outlawed such
- restrictions.
- </p>
- <p> The N.R.A.'s air of invincibility was badly shaken last
- month when the House of Representatives voted overwhelmingly in
- favor of the Brady bill. The gun lobby had orchestrated a
- massive campaign against the bill, which will require a
- seven-day waiting period for all handgun purchases. Now cities
- from Los Angeles to New York are monitoring the debate over the
- Chicago gun ban. Says Marshall Kandell, a spokesman for the
- Housing Authority of the City of Los Angeles: "If the
- enforcement of a gun ban in the Chicago housing projects is
- successful, you can bet that the Los Angeles Housing Authority
- and housing authorities across the country will take a close
- look." All the more reason to hope that Operation Clean Sweep
- will keep on sweeping.
- </p>
-
- </body></article>
- </text>
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