New York has received roughly $100 million for mental health services from the federal government under a landmark gun violence prevention bill passed last year, Sen. Kirsten Gillibrand announced on Monday.
The Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, a sweeping measure signed shortly after the Uvalde school shooting, made gun trafficking and โstraw purchasingโ federal offenses and awarded $750 million nationally for mental and behavioral health services, among other measures.
Gillibrand, a former gun rights supporter, started penning gun gun violence prevention laws after replacing Hillary Clinton in the Senate in 2009. She named her first law after Nyasia Pryear-Yard, a 17-year-old Brooklyn teen who was struck and killed by a stray bullet over a decade ago.
A bulk of the billโs mental healthcare funding for New York โ $65 million โ went to Vibrant Emotional Health, which runs the 988 crisis and suicide hotline. The money will also pay for about 400 new mental health professionals to work full-time in New York schools.
Staten Island District Attorney Michael McMahon said at a news conference on Monday that mental health support in schools is a key tenant of preventing gun violence.
A 13-year-old boy was shot and killed at a Staten Island playground earlier this year, he said.
โWhen we went to the school to follow up with the students who were impacted with the trauma, there were no mental health services,” he said. “We don’t have [mental health support] to deal with the trauma after gun violence, and we don’t have it to prevent gun violence.โ
In addition to the funding for mental health services, the legislation made gun trafficking a federal offense.
Officials blame the โiron pipeline,โ a route used to smuggle weapons from southern states with more relaxed gun laws to mid-Atlantic states with stricter restrictions like New York and New Jersey. About 80% of guns used in New York crimes are trafficked from other states, including Georgia, Virginia, South…
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