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Greater Houston Area Leaders Announce Third Gun Buyback Event in Houston

ABOVE: Micah Gabay, 15, left, Worthing Early College High School sophomore, speaks to the crowd at the Harris County Gun Buyback announcement with Commissioner Ellis and Mayor Turner listening to her appeal to make schools safer. 

Commissioner Ellis, Mayor Turner, and Sheriff Gonzalez Hosting Event on February 18th at Deussen Park

Harris County Precinct One Commissioner Rodney Ellis, Houston Mayor Sylvester Turner, and Harris County Sheriff Ed Gonzalez announced that they are hosting another gun buyback event scheduled for February 18th at Deussen Park.

Last year, Commissioner Ellis, in conjunction with the City of Houston, held two gun buybacks that collected 2,000 weapons. Five others are planned after the February buyback.

“Harris County is mobilizing its resources with absolute urgency in a full-court press to reduce gun violence in our communities,” said Commissioner Ellis, whose Precinct One is partnering with the Sheriff’s Office to conduct the buyback. “We may not control gun laws, but we are not powerless to take guns off the street.”

The February 18th event from 8 a.m. to noon at Deussen Park, 12303 Sonnier St., will be the county and the city’s latest efforts to reduce violent crime and make Houston-area communities safer. Residents—with no questions asked—can turn in firearms in exchange for gift cards in the amount of $50, $100, $150 and $200—depending on the type of gun. The federal American Rescue Plan Act funds the program.

“Our goal then and now is to keep guns in the hands of responsible owners and to give people who want to get rid of their guns a safe way to do that without keeping them on the streets or at any home where they can fall in the hands of the wrong person,” Mayor Turner said. “We all know there are way too many guns on our streets.”

Sheriff Gonzalez said the gun buyback is one of his office’s efforts to provide a safe and effective outlet for those who may want to turn in unwanted guns.

“It may have been perhaps a loved one who passed away and left a cadre of guns in the home and family members don’t know how to discard them,” said Sheriff Gonzalez. “We now provide them with that option. And we hope to build on that success of the (Houston) Police Department and the City of Houston.”

Micah Gabay, 15, a Worthing Early College High School sophomore, spoke at a recent press conference announcing the event and added a different perspective than a politician or law enforcement officer. She offered a profound statement as a student who lives with the fear of mass school shootings.

“A lot of times, some stuff would happen at school and people threaten to shoot (up) the school so we would have to go on lockdown,” said Gabay, standing in front of a “Stop Gun Violence Mural” that was painted on an outside building at her school. “And I’m honestly happy that the guns are being taken off the streets so we don’t have to worry as much as we normally would about gun violence happening within the school.”

Commissioner Ellis said the state’s dangerous gun laws are fueling the crisis and flooding our communities with guns.

“We can’t bring back a life,” said Commissioner Ellis. “But we can buy back a gun and make sure it never falls into the wrong hands or causes harm.”

Since 2009, more people have died in mass shootings in Texas—including at schools in Sante Fe and Uvalde—than any other state, according to a report by Everytown for Gun Safety, a gun violence prevention organization. In addition, the gun death rate in Texas has increased nearly 16% since 2010, according to the Johns Hopkins Center’s Educational Fund to Stop Gun Violence.

The post Greater Houston Area Leaders Announce Third Gun Buyback Event in Houston appeared first on Houston Forward Times.

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