Open in App
  • Local
  • U.S.
  • Election
  • Politics
  • Sports
  • Lifestyle
  • Education
  • Real Estate
  • Newsletter
  • Idaho Statesman

    ‘Dead kids are everybody’s jurisdiction’: Boise City Council seeks gun-control measures

    By Sarah Cutler,

    8 days ago

    Boise City Council Member Kathy Corless’s voice wavered as she described a close call at her daughter’s junior high school on Monday: The school district sent a message to hundreds of parents about a threat a student made on social media.

    “We continue to see this happen, and this is now a reality,” Corless said. “That our kids have to go through these active shooter drills is almost beyond (comprehension).”

    https://img.particlenews.com/image.php?url=1ZF9QU_0vdfu3kq00
    Fourth graders in class in 2022. On Tuesday, Boise City Council Member Kathy Corless decried “political gamemanship” that left schoolchildren vulnerable to gun violence. Sarah A. Miller/smiller@idahostatesman.com

    Her comments were part of an emotional discussion Tuesday of a resolution by the City Council reaffirming the council’s commitment to gun safety efforts. The resolution, sponsored by Council Member Jimmy Hallyburton after recent school shootings in Georgia and Maryland, called for state and federal leaders to require background checks for gun sales, restrict ownership of military-style guns and limit gun access for people in crisis.

    During the meeting, Council President Colin Nash recounted his grandmother’s loss of both her husbands to gun violence.

    “If you’ve been directly affected by gun violence … those conversations become pretty real pretty quick,” Hallyburton told the Idaho Statesman by phone Thursday.

    On its face, the resolution doesn’t seem like much of a change. Resolutions aren’t enforceable by law in Idaho, and its language calls only for the council to “continue” to support gun reform and urge federal and state policy change.

    But Hallyburton told the Statesman he aimed to change the tenor of the local conversation around gun control and the Second Amendment. During the meeting, he emphasized that the resolution wasn’t meant to point fingers at those with opposing views.

    “I want to make sure it’s crystal clear that I’m not placing blame on anyone,” he said. “I’m asking for help. I’m asking for our state legislators to see the city of Boise as a partner in addressing these issues … and to see this as an opportunity to figure out, what is it that we can do to reduce the amount of kids that are committing suicide in Idaho, what can we do to reduce the possibility of a shooting happening at one of our schools?”

    In the days since, Hallyburton told the Statesman, he’s been deluged with emails ranging from enthusiastic support of the resolution to angry recrimination. On X, formerly known as Twitter, the Idaho Second Amendment Alliance suggested such a resolution was unrealistic in Idaho. Two Idaho Panhandle legislators derided it, with Rep. Heather Scott, R-Blanchard, calling council members “communists” and Rep. Phil Hart, R-Kellogg, calling the resolution “ illegal .”

    Hallyburton has been dwelling, though, on those in between.

    “Some of the folks who reached out that, I think, even disagreed with some of the solutions that I was asking for … I think they appreciated the tone that I was bringing forward,” he said. “Like, ‘you’re not pointing a finger, and I think that is part of the solution. Even though you’re presenting an idea that I disagree with, I appreciate the tone in which you’re doing it, because it’s opening up the conversation rather than shutting it down.’”

    The resolution, reported by the Idaho Dispatch, passed with five votes. Council Member Luci Willits, the council’s lone Republican, voted against it. She argued that it went outside of the council’s lane to prescribe policy for state and federal officials. Instead, she said, Boise should focus on its own policies, whether that meant spending more on public safety or on school resource officers.

    Nash pushed back.

    Boise “can do more, and we will do more, but we need help to do it,” he said, “because dead kids are everybody’s jurisdiction.”

    Hallyburton placed the gun safety conversation in the context of Idaho’s youth suicide rate, among the highest in the country. Many of those completed suicides, he said, used a gun.

    Many on the right, he acknowledged, say the conversation around gun violence should focus more on mental health care, rather than on access to guns. He doesn’t see those as mutually exclusive solutions.

    “When we’re addressing these types of issues, we shouldn’t really be leaving solutions off the table,” he said.

    ‘Terrorism is upon us,’ Idaho lawmaker says as House OKs bill for concealed guns in school

    ‘Like becoming a cop’: Boise-area houses of worship arm volunteers as threats rise

    Expand All
    Comments / 17
    Add a Comment
    The Dusty Shredder
    7d ago
    Jesus fucking christ, I dealt active shooter drills when I was in school and that was right after Columbine. The issue isn't the guns, the issue is behavior and mental fortitude. Over the years we've been fostering lower mental fortitude, and now it's come to a point where people simply can't handle what's being thrown at them. As a society, we need to stop vilifying those who defend themselves the way they need to and stop placating those who put people into a position where they NEED to defend themselves. If more people felt comfortable defending themselves and others, fewer people would see others as easy prey and fewer people would actually set out to commit violent criminal acts. In addition, if we stopped arresting people who set out to defend people especially in active shooter situations, we wouldn't really be in this mess.
    Julianna Kelly
    7d ago
    no one is stripping me of my amendment rights. especially for something that happened in California. they always want to go after the good people to deal with the mental situations of others. all guns should be locked, and children should never know where the keys are unless they are properly trained and have no mental issues. lots of kids can't handle real life, and we, as parents, have to help them maneuver through what real life is all about. stop coddling our children and toughen them up, but to always have respect for others.
    View all comments
    YOU MAY ALSO LIKE
    Local News newsLocal News

    Comments / 0