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FIREARM
CONFISCATION FRONT ORGANIZATIONS CHANGE THEIR NAMES BUT NOT THEIR AGENDA
Handgun Control,
Inc. and Million Mom March renamed "Brady Campaign"
by
Michael D. Robbins
July
7, 2001
HCI
and MMM have Changed their Name but not their Agenda
July 7, 2001 - FraudFactor
- The HCI and MMM firearm confiscation lobby
front organizations have changed their names to confuse the public, but
not their agenda. Handgun Control, Inc. (HCI) now operates under the vanity
name, "The Brady Campaign", and is merging with the "Million Mom March"
(thousands, actually) in an effort to confuse the public, and due to the
drastically declining support base and influence of both organizations.
The Million Mom March (MMM, formerly the
"Bell Campaign") was forced to move out of its rent-free offices in the
tax-payer financed San Francisco General Hospital after self-defense rights
activists including Jim March and Nadja Adolf discovered that the Million
Mom March was illegally using publicly funded facilities and resources
to run their organization. MMM political funding was provided by the federal
government Center for Disease Control (CDC) and was laundered through a
firearm confiscation front organization, the Trauma Foundation (TF). The
501(c)(3) non-profit Trauma Foundation has had office space inside the
San Francisco county government-owned-and-run San Francisco General Hospital
since 1981.
The Trauma Foundation
lists as one of its accomplishments organizing and lobbying to ban traditional
semiauto self-defense and sporting firearms mislabeled as "assault weapons".
The Trauma Foundation has also used public funds to engage in political
lobbying activities promoting laws that violate individual rights including
motorcycle hemet laws, mandatory seatbelt laws, and tax increases. Furthermore,
the Trauma Foundtion has established the "Gun Victims Memorial" web site
for anti-self-defense political progoganda purposes, (contact email address
"mailto:lolivier@tf.org"). The fact
that this is the "Gun Victims" memorial and not the "Murder Victims" memorial
further demonstrates the anti-firearm and self-defense agenda of the Trauma
Foundation.
HCI was founded on the principle of implementing
a three-step incremental program to ban and confiscate the firearms from
the law-abiding public:
-
Develop firearm registration lists of all
legally owned firearms;
-
Enact increasingly restrictive gun control
laws to slow down and stop the manufacture, sale, and transfer of firearms;
and
-
Ban the ownership and possession of firearms
and use the registration lists to confiscate the registered firearms from
the law-abiding public.
This founding principle of HCI was documented
in an interview with HCI founder Pete Shields in the July 26, 1976 issue
of the New Yorker magazine. Shields boasted about their firearm
confiscation agenda, explaining that it was like a loaf of bread: if he
cannot have the whole loaf immediately, he will be happy to take the whole
loaf one slice at a time.
The news media has been too incompetent
to learn or report that it has been the law of the land for more than thirty
years that firearm registration laws do not apply to convicted felons.
The U.S. Supreme Court ruled in Haynes vs. U.S. (1968) that a felon
cannot be convicted for failure to register his firearms because that would
violate his Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination. Felons are
prohibited from owning or possessing firearms.
Therefore, the only purpose for firearm
registration laws is to confiscate firearms from the law-abiding public.
When Australia implemented their firearm ban and confiscation several years
ago, the state that did not first register the firearms experienced a significantly
lower compliance rate compared to the states that had registered the firearms
before the ban was enacted.
HCI has never repudiated their founder
Pete Shields and his founding agenda, nor has HCI deviated from their firearm
confiscation agenda. In fact, while HCI has stated publicly that they want
"reasonable" gun control laws, they have consistently lobbied for unreasonable
laws that have been proven dangerous and counter-productive, that target
and punish ordinary nonviolent people with no criminal intent, that
prevent and inhibit self-defense, and that are opposed by an overwhelming
majority (typically 85 to 95 percent) of police officers nationwide.
In fact, HCI has lobbied over a period
of many decades for numerous laws that do not even recognize self-defense
as a legitimate or a legal reason to own a firearm. Many of these laws
have been enacted. Examples include the federal Gun Control Act of 1968,
the 1989 Roos-Roberti Gun Ban in California, the 2000 Handgun Ban in California,
and numerous other laws.
Furthermore, HCI has participated in litigation
to force the confiscation of firearms from ordinary nonviolent firearm
owners in California who purchased their firearms legally but did not re-register
them on time within the grandfather provisions of a new gun ban that HCI
lobbied for and their fellow Democrats enacted. More on this subject will
be written. Check back frequently.
Gun control is and always has been deeply
root in racism, elitism, and discrimination. The earliest known gun control
law, passed in Georgia in 1640, prohibited people of color from owning
firearms. After the Civil War, the Black Codes achieved the same result
without being as explicit. The first "Saturday Night Special" prohibitions
were enacted as Black Codes after the Civil War to prevent the freed slaves
and low income whites from owning firearms. These laws banned handguns
that were not of the type and cost of the Colt Army Revolver and the Colt
Navy Revolver, which were prohibitively expensive for the targeted groups.
HCI has lobbied for numerous racist and
discriminatory laws that target, disarm and endanger low income and minority
citizens, women, the elderly, and the handicapped. These HCI laws engage
in price discrimination and ban small affordable firearms that are the
best and often the only practical choice for many women, the elderly and
other adults with small or weak hands. HCI continuously lobbies to ban
these important affordable handguns, mislabeling them as "Saturday Night
Specials".
These handgun bans are often framed and
misrepresented as "safety" legislation, when in fact they endanger everyone
including those who choose not to own firearms. In many cases, these "Saturday
Night Special" laws are intentionally written to be extremely broad in
order to ban as many firearms as possible, including many expensive firearms
of all types, sizes, weights, and calibers, even magnum calibers. Once
of many such examples is California's Senate Bill 15 (SB 15), enacted in
the 1999-2000 legislative session.
The Million Mom March (MMM) was forced
to move out of its rent-free offices in the tax-payer financed San Francisco
General Hospital after self-defense rights activists including Jim March
and Nadja Adolf discovered that the Million Mom March was illegally using
publicly funded facilities and resources to run their organization. MMM
political funding was provided by the federal government Center for Disease
Control (CDC) and was laundered through a firearm confiscation front organization,
the Trauma Foundation (TF). The 501(c)(3) non-profit Trauma Foundation
has had office space inside the San Francisco county government-owned-and-run
San Francisco General Hospital since 1981.
The Trauma Foundation
lists as one of its accomplishments organizing and lobbying to ban traditional
semiauto firearms mislabeled as "assault weapons" by firearm prohibitionists.
The Trauma Foundation has also used public funds to engage in political
lobbying activities for laws that violate individual rights including motorcycle
hemet laws, mandatory seatbelt laws, tax increases. Furthermore, the Trauma
Foundtion has established the "Gun Victims Memorial" web site for anti-self-defense
political progoganda purposes, with the contact email address "mailto:lolivier@tf.org".
The fact that this is the "Gun Victims" memorial and not the "Murder Victims"
memorial clearly demonstrates the anti-firearm and self-defense agenda
of the Trauma Foundation.
The Trauma Foundation has also established
and funded another firearm confiscation front organization, the Pacific
Center for Violence Prevention (PCVP). The PCVP home page (http://www.PCVP.org/)
contains the following statement (as of August 3, 2001):
The California Wellness Foundation
(TCWF) was established with an enourous grant from Health Net, Inc. (NYSE:HNT),
one of the largest network-model health plans in California. Healthnet
provided nearly all of the funding for TCWF, including $30 million to spend
over five years to lobby for laws to ban and confiscate firearms. The TCWF
also bought radio commercials that urged voters to contact Congress to
enact "health care reform" legislation that would have implemented Hillary
Clinton's socialized medicine plan. Thus, the TCWF allocated $30 million
to promote the firearm ban and confiscation agenda of former President
Bill Clinton and the Democratic Party, and Bill and Hillary Clinton tried
to nationalize the country's health care system and create a socialized
medicine system that presumably would have financially benefitted Health
Net.
The TCWF actively lobbied for a massive
handgun ban in California, Senate Bill 15 (SB 15) in the 1999-2000 legislative
session, which was enacted with party-line votes by the Democrat majority
state legislature and Democrat Governor Gray Davis.
The TCWF web site contains the following
statement regarding Health Net as its source of funding (as of August 3,
2001):
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http://www.TCWF.org/about/history.htm
Origins of The California Wellness Foundation
The California Wellness Foundation (TCWF)
is an independent, private foundation, whose mission is to improve the
health of Californians by making grants for health promotion, wellness
education and disease prevention. Since its first year of operation TCWF
has awarded 2,371 grants totaling more than $333.6 million. It is one of
the state’s largest private foundations, making an average of $40 million
in grants each year in pursuit of its mission.
TCWF was created in 1992 as a result of
Health Net’s conversion from nonprofit to for-profit status. Under the
terms of the 1992 California Department of Corporations’ conversion order
approving Health Net’s change to for-profit status, the Foundation received
the equivalent of the Department’s valuation of Health Net at that time,
which was $300 million, plus 80 percent of the equity of the holding company
formed as Health Net’s parent. Later, other mergers involving Health Net’s
parent and QualMed increased TCWF’s assets dramatically. The Foundation
currently has assets of approximately $1 billion. The Foundation operates
independently of Health Net.
The California Wellness Foundation
6320 Canoga Avenue,
Suite 1700
Woodland Hills, CA 91367
(818) 593-6600
tcwf@tcwf.org |
A search for gun control at the TCWF web
site resulted in the following list:
http://www.tcwf.org/cgi/search/search.pl?Terms=gun+control&Submit.x=12&Submit.y=3
The TCWF web site contains the following
statements regarding their gun control agenda and funding (as of August
3, 2001):
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http://www.TCWF.org/portfolio/2000/fall/pages/cover_story.htm
Grantees Use Policy Advocacy
To Address Root Causes of Violence
A strong network of advocates throughout
California is working to inform policymakers and opinion leaders about
the need to make the prevention of violence against youth a top priority.
Leading the way are 11 organizations from
a variety of disciplines—juvenile justice, religion, media, education,
health and the legal field—working together toward the common goal of reducing
violence against youth through policy advocacy. Since The California Wellness
Foundation (TCWF) started its 10-year, $60 million Violence Prevention
Initiative (VPI) in 1993, it has made a significant number of grants to
educate policymakers about the importance of violence prevention policies.
"We’ve made incredible progress with new
policies that reduce access to firearms and increase state funding for
programs that prevent violence against youth," said Gary Yates, TCWF president
and CEO. "These are accomplishments we can be proud of because lives have
been saved, but we need to keep up our efforts to educate policymakers
and opinion leaders to continue developing public policies that protect
our young people."
The good news is that the youth homicide
rate has been declining in the past few years, Yates said, but gun violence
remains the leading cause of death in California for youth between the
ages of 13 and 19. In their ongoing efforts to prevent violence, grantees
of the Violence Prevention Initiative use a public health approach, which
allows them to address the multiple factors that contribute to violence,
such as social and physical environments.
"There is no single cause [of violence],
so there can’t be a single solution," said TCWF Program Officer Michael
Balaoing. "Policy change is a key factor in creating the programs necessary
to treat violence as the preventable public health problem it is."
Within the VPI, 11 policy grantees work
together collaboratively to share information, expertise and resources
with each other, multiplying the impact of their efforts.
Pacific Center for Violence Prevention
The Pacific Center for Violence Prevention
(PCVP), the VPI’s policy center, generates violence prevention-related
policy briefs and fact sheets, maintains an extensive library of research
about violence prevention and assists VPI grantees in their advocacy efforts.
PCVP’s policy director, Andres Soto, said
great strides have been made and points to a number of ordinances that
have been enacted in the past two years that limit the sale of "Saturday
night specials" and assault weapons, require safety devices on weapons
made and sold in the state, establish licensing and monitoring of production
procedures of gun manufacturers, and toughen restrictions on gun shows.
At the end of the California’s 1999 legislative session, funding for violence
prevention programs had risen for the second year in a row, and the state
of California is currently providing more funding to after-school programs
than any other state in the nation.
"We’ve accomplished a lot in the area of
reducing access to firearms by establishing grassroots support," Soto said.
"It’s been more difficult to change the thinking from incarceration to
violence prevention, but we’re trying to develop a format to make our case
heard."
Martin & Glantz LLC
Making the case for investment in violence
prevention on a statewide level has been the goal of a public education
campaign created by Martin & Glantz with TCWF funding. The campaign
has focused on two key messages: reducing the availability of and access
to handguns and increasing resources for violence prevention programs,
such as after-school activities and mentoring. The campaign has included
direct mail, advertisements, polling, media advocacy and statewide videoconferences.
"The Campaign to Prevent Handgun Violence
Against Kids demonstrated that you can build an active base of support
when you research and craft messages that people feel they can own," said
Candice Francis, senior associate with Martin & Glantz. "The message
that ‘handguns are the number-one killer of youth’ spoke factually about
the urgency of the situation and helped create an environment that supported
the public, opinion leaders and policymakers taking action to reduce access
to handguns."
Francis added that the Resources For Youth
campaign, designed to promote investments in violence prevention programs,
has built a strong base of support, but more work needs to be done to create
a constant demand for prevention resources.
The California Wellness Foundation
6320 Canoga Avenue,
Suite 1700
Woodland Hills, CA 91367
(818) 593-6600
tcwf@tcwf.org |
|
http://www.TCWF.org/portfolio/2000/fall/pages/cover_story2.htm
Grantees Use Policy Advocacy
To Address Root Causes of Violence
Commonweal Juvenile Justice Program
An example of this
challenge, said David Steinhart, director of Commonweal’s Juvenile Justice
Program (JJP), is Proposition 21, the Juvenile Crime Initiative
that won overwhelming public support in California’s March election. Commonweal’s
JJP
tracks, analyzes and disseminates legislative and budget information on
gun control and violence prevention from a public health perspective.
"The [Proposition
21] vote was almost schizophrenic," Steinhart said. "Surveys consistently
show that the public supports sound crime prevention strategies, but that
wasn’t reflected at the ballot box."
(Photo by Robert
Pacheco shows a man leaning over a display of shoes and framed portrait
photographs of purported murder victims, captioned "Shoes that belonged
to victims of gun violence are shown here in a Silent March held in Los
Angeles on August 12. Activities like these help make the issue of violence
vivid and tangible for policymakers and opinion leaders.")
Noting that the proposed $80 billion state
general budget includes $5 billion for corrections and only $250 million
for violence prevention, Steinhart said advocates
need to resume the momentum generated among lawmakers for violence prevention
before passage of Proposition 21. The $250 million targeted for
violence prevention is a significant increase over the $100 million designated
in 1995, an increase Steinhart credited to the VPI and its participants.
Commonweal’s JJP
"keeps politicians in touch with public sentiment that wants sound crime
prevention strategies," Steinhart said. The organization also communicates
state governmental actions and proposals on violence prevention to opinion
leaders around the state.
California Council of Churches
One approach being taken to raise awareness
among the public is personalization of the issue.
"When you talk about youth violence in
the abstract, you get a much different response than when you talk about
specific kids and families," said Scott Anderson, executive director of
the California Council of Churches, which offers education and training
in youth violence prevention programs to its 3,800 congregations. "People
feel powerless when they’re confronted by faceless crime, and all they
know is to join support for a punitive approach."
The council is one of several TCWF
grantees that bring people together to discuss alternatives, look at "best
practices" and get involved on a personal level. One tool the organization
uses is an interfaith, intergenerational study guide, "Creating a Caring
Community," designed to help participants develop or join after-school
programs. (The guide is available on the council’s website. See website
list.) Twenty-five training workshops are in progress around the state
this fall.
"Research consistently confirms that most
youth-related crimes occur during late-afternoon, after-school hours,"
Anderson said. "We’re providing educational materials and a best-practices
publication to policymakers, opinion leaders and the general public in
an effort to encourage legislators to be more flexible in funding after-school
programs in all areas, including those that are faith- and community-based."
Based in Sacramento,
the California Council of Churches facilitates access to state legislative
resources for other TCWF grantees, linking constituencies to move
the violence prevention agenda, Anderson said.
Berkeley Media Studies Group
Acknowledging that
news media play a large role in shaping public opinion and policy, Berkeley
Media Studies Group (BMSG) works with journalists to help them
put reports of crime into context and approach coverage from a public health
perspective, said Lori Dorfman, director of BMSG.
Dorfman and her colleagues
developed a video that juxtaposes actual television news stories about
violence with the same stories reshot to include a public health perspective.
BMSG
uses the video in workshops to help television journalists in Northern
and Southern California add more information and perspective to their reports
on violence.
"Reporters ask questions—that’s their job,"
Dorfman said. "But when it comes to violence, are they asking the right
questions? Imagine how we might understand violence differently if reporters
asked: ‘How often does this happen in this community? Did the victim and
perpetrator know one another? How was the weapon obtained? Was alcohol
involved?’ "
In addition to the workshops, BMSG
has also produced a handbook for journalists and helps connect reporters
to good data sources.
California Child, Youth and Family Coalition
"Contrary to media reports, youth are concerned
and engaged in large numbers when it comes to violence prevention," said
Kate Fogle, executive director of California Child, Youth and Family
Coalition (CCYFC). The agency, based in Sacramento, gives a
voice to youth by providing opportunities for them to explore and act on
issues with plenty of support from adults.
"We can’t do youth violence prevention
without youth," Fogle said. "Adults can’t really know the experiences of
a young person in California in 2000. Young people can give us that perspective.
Given support and opportunities in a safe setting, they can make important
contributions to policy development."
A one-day training in August, planned and
implemented by youth, drew more than 100 young people and adults who developed
action plans in violence prevention, as well as in other issues affecting
the health of adolescents. Teen-produced publications provide further opportunities
for youth perspectives to be interjected into policy considerations.
"We’re finding more success in communicating
and broadening policymakers’ understanding of the needs of youth," Fogle
said. "We need to keep working to show how all the pieces fit together
to develop a more global approach to policy that creates a healthy environment
for youth to prevent violence."
Center on Juvenile and Criminal Justice
The Center on
Juvenile and Criminal Justice (CJCJ) in San Francisco is focusing
on "reform of the entire criminal justice system in an effort to reduce
institutionalization, so we can reinvest resources in things that
will better benefit society," said Dan Macallair, the center’s vice president.
In that effort, CJCJ develops and
disseminates data
to help leaders and policymakers at state
and local levels make informed decisions on violence prevention issues.
For example, studies on racial demographics of youth in California’s juvenile
justice system and a state-by-state analysis of juvenile incarceration
trends and crime rates received national attention upon release this year.
"Working with other
VPI
partners broadens our reach and enables more people to have access to information
that can influence violence prevention policy," Macallair said.
CJCJ relies on new technology as
a valuable communication tool and has compiled a wealth of information,
statistics and resources on its website.
Legal Community Against Violence
Barrie Becker, executive director
of Legal Community Against Violence (LCAV) in San Francisco,
said providing policymakers with information and
finding commonalities among opposing views is a key to success in preventing
gun violence. LCAV assists cities and counties by providing research
and examples of legally correct firearms ordinances and giving free legal
assistance when challenges arise.
"When we give city and county policymakers
the right tools and clearly lay out their options, they’re ready to run,"
she said. "We’ve done the legal research to help them get past the constant
threat of litigation and the pro- and anti-gun arguments to focus on safety
issues that affect everyone.
"There can be agreements that require responsible
manufacture, transfer and use of firearms, and that’s where the discussion
needs to start," she added. "It’s about saving lives."
In the past two years, more than 30 local
firearms ordinances have been adopted, bringing the total to more than
100 statewide, she said. "State law usually follows local law, so it’s
important to keep providing education and resources at the community level,"
Becker said.
The California Wellness Foundation
6320 Canoga Avenue,
Suite 1700
Woodland Hills, CA 91367
(818) 593-6600
tcwf@tcwf.org |
|
http://www.TCWF.org/portfolio/2000/fall/pages/cover_story3.htm
Grantees Use Policy Advocacy
To Address Root Causes of Violence
Orange County Citizens for the Prevention
of Gun Violence
Community-based advocacy is just what Orange
County Citizens for the Prevention of Gun Violence (OCCPGV)
is doing.
With TCWF
funds, the organization mounted posters in 20 bus passenger shelters throughout
Orange County in a campaign that ran in the spring and this fall.
The outreach complements increasing activity by the organization’s speakers’
bureau, which makes presentations to community groups, churches and schools
and at public events.
"We keep moving further out to the general
public from the safety of communicating with people who think the way we
do," said Charlie Blek, who with his wife, Mary Leigh, founded
OCCPGV in 1995, following the murder of their 21-year-old son during a
robbery attempt in New York City. Mary Leigh Blek
also heads the national Million Mom March organization.
"We know there is
broad general support for gun safety measures in Orange County, but it’s
not reflected among our county legislators," Charlie Blek said. "We let
policymakers know what the public really thinks in order to overcome that
disconnect."
One way OCCAGV
keeps the lines of communication open is by producing a "legislative scorecard"
of votes on firearms issues and correlating it with action alerts, surveys
and polling data.
Violence Prevention Coalition of Greater
Los Angeles
(Photo of female speaker at podium with
a large poster on its front side. The poster shows
Uncle Sam and has harge letters stating, "AMERICA'S SHAME - GUN VIOLENCE".
The photo caption reads, "At a recent press conferernce, Billie Weiss,
executive director of the Violence Prevention Coalition of Greater Los
Angeles, describes the crushing impact violence has on public health.")
The Violence Prevention Coalition of
Greater Los Angeles (VPCLA), which encompasses more than 720
affiliated organizations and individuals, also uses
data to influence opinions and policies, explained Billie Weiss,
director of the coalition’s Injury and Violence Prevention Project.
By
producing maps that spot locations of licensed gun dealers and sites of
gun-related deaths, VPCLA shows a high correlation between the two, along
with many other factors.
"By supplying information
to local policymakers, we can encourage them to take steps to more closely
monitor gun sales through such actions as requiring county business licenses
and other safety measures," Weiss said.
Another shocking
statistic highlighted by VPCLA is the $80 million a year that Los Angeles
County spends on medical costs resulting from gun violence, which doesn’t
take into account any other costs, such as law enforcement.
Weiss said that reports of declining violence
may have caused some funders and policymakers to relax their efforts, noting
that juvenile homicides in Los Angeles County are up about 28 percent so
far this year.
"It’s a public health
emergency that requires community mobilization," she said. VPCLA is working
with the City Council and County Board of Supervisors on immediate interventions,
as well as putting into place long-term neighborhood strategies.
"People are beginning to look at violence
prevention in a different light," Weiss said. "It’s an ongoing struggle
to convince the unconvinced that prevention works and gets much more lasting
results. It’s cheaper and healthier to nurture families with hope."
Women Against Gun Violence
Roberta Schiller, executive director of
Women
Against Gun Violence (WAGV), agrees that "this is a seminal moment
in violence prevention. The Million Mom March was
stunning in its outpouring of support for responsible gun laws. It takes
time to change a culture, but we’re starting to change attitudes."
WAGV, a Los Angeles
coalition of 115 organizations addressing firearms issues as a public health
concern, targets women, holding "Pro-Active Grief" meetings for
survivors of gun violence, and provides education
for policymakers, opinion leaders and the general public.
"When mothers get involved, we have a whole
new dimension, based on nurturing and safety, and a very strong voice,"
Schiller said.
WAGV provides victims of gun violence,
who often are mothers, with tools and opportunities to turn their tragedies
into positive actions. Berkeley Media Studies Group
has provided media training for WAGV speakers to help them frame their
messages and stay on track in confrontational situations.
WGAV organized the
Los Angeles Million Mom March to the West Los Angeles Federal Building
in March, an event that raised the level of interest in the issue
and attracted new volunteers.
"At different times in our history, certain
issues have come to the forefront in our nation," Schiller said. "This
is the time for guns and gun violence. It’s an opportunity we must not
miss. It’s a convergence of laws and concerns; safe havens are threatened,
people are looking for ways to change the course. We need to put effort
and dollars toward it. That time is now."
Further information about TCWF’s 11 violence
prevention policy advocacy grantees and their work can be found at the
following Internet sites:
Berkeley Media Studies
Group
http://www.phi.org/index-main.htm
California Child, Youth
and Family Coalition
http://www.CCYFC.org/
California Council of
Churches
http://www.CalChurches.org/
Center on Juvenile and
Criminal Justice
http://www.CJCJ.org/
Commonweal Juvenile Justice
Program
http://www.Commonweal.org/
Legal Community Against
Violence
http://www.LCAV.org/
Martin & Glantz’ Resources
For Youth Campaign
http://www.PreventViolence.org/
Orange County Citizens
for the Prevention of Gun Violence (Million Mom March) - founded by attorney
Charles Blek and his wife Mary Leigh Blek in 1995
http://www.MillionMomMarch.com/
http://www.StopGunViolence.org/
http://www.StopGunViolence.org/index.htm
http://www.TheBellCampaign.com/
Pacific
Center for Violence Prevention
http://www.PCVP.org/
http://www.PCVP.org/pcvp/firearms/guncntn2.shtml
Violence Prevention Coalition
of Greater Los Angeles
http://www.VPCLA.org/
Women Against Gun Violence
-
"A Coalition United to
End Tolerance of Gun Violence"
"Women Against Gun Violence
(WAGV) was launched in January of 1994 to address one of the leading issues
of our time:Gun Violence. Like all epidemics, gun violence has no boundaries
- not age, not gender, not income, not race or ethnicity, not geography."
http://www.WAGV.org/
Women Against Gun Violence
- Resources
http://www.JoinTogether.org/plugin.jtml?siteID=WAGV&P=1
Women Against Gun Violence
P.O. Box 1501
Culver City, CA 90232-1501
Phone: 310.204.2348
Fax:
310.204.6643
Email: info@wagv.org
Information on TCWF’s
Violence Prevention Initiative
http://www.TCWF.org/
The California Wellness Foundation
6320 Canoga Avenue,
Suite 1700
Woodland Hills, CA 91367
(818) 593-6600
tcwf@tcwf.org |
|
http://www.TCWF.org/annual_1998/policy.html
STRATEGIES TO EDUCATE THE PUBLIC AND
POLICY MAKERS
| GOALS
To reduce youth access
to firearms in order to prevent injuries and death. To increase support
for youth violence prevention programs. To reduce youth access to
alcohol and drugs. |
Strongly influenced
by research from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) and
California’s Injury Control Program, the Foundation established the Violence
Prevention Initiative Policy Program because it recognized that policy
change and focused social action are key factors in promoting public health
goals.
We believed that establishing
clear policy goals would help grantees form a shared understanding
of what the Initiative would try to achieve and provide a basis for measuring
the results.
We identified three
policy goals: reducing youth access to firearms in order to prevent in
juries and deaths, increasing support for youth violence prevention programs,
and reducing youth access to alcohol and other drugs.
We provided grants
to 14 organizations to implement the goals of the VPI Policy Program.
With many opportunities to work synergistically, these
organizations contributed valuable policy, public education and information
to help VPI grantees effectively inform policy-makers, the media and the
public about violence prevention as a health issue and some of the solutions
worth exploring.
CREATING A POLICY CENTER FOCUSED ON
VIOLENCE PREVENTION
To ensure that all of the VPI’s components
were integrated into the Policy Program, we awarded
a grant in 1993 to the Trauma Foundation of San Francisco General Hospital
to establish the Pacific Center for Violence Prevention. Leading
policy organizations were retained by the Pacific Center to provide a wide
array of media and advocacy training and help involve grantees in all of
the Initiative’s components.
The Center generated
extensive violence prevention-related information, research and resources
to grantees, such as policy papers and fact sheets, legal advice and assistance
on crime and violence prevention policy. The Center also coordinated the
Academic Fellows program and organization of the annual Initiative conference.
Among some of its
success stories is the Center’s policy work on Saturday night specials,
small cheaply made handguns commonly used in crimes and violent acts throughout
California.
Andrew McGuire, executive
director of the Pacific Center for Violence Prevention, recalled doing
some “gumshoe” epidemiology with public health data from the CDC and crime
data from the Federal Bureau of Investigation. He found that more youths
died by handguns than car crashes or disease.
“I knew that this
was a way that the people of California could understand the issue,” McGuire
said. “To this day, it still pops up in [newspaper] editorials.”
This key fact helped
the Center and other VPI grantees to address the first policy goal of reducing
access to firearms by identifying specific objectives that could help policymakers,
communities, health experts and the public explore solutions to reduce
the high number of firearm-related deaths. The information was also interwoven
as a key news
EARLY RESULTS
The results thus
far have been impressive. At least 60 cities and six counties in California
enacted more than 180 firearm regulations. Of those, 39 communities banned
the sale of Saturday night special handguns. Others passed ordinances such
as requiring trigger-lock devices and prohibiting the sales of high-capacity
ammunition rounds. None of these regulations existed before the Initiative
was founded. The work of the Initiative grantees helped create a climate
for this change. “The gun ordinances would not have happened without the
[grantee work] of the Violence Prevention Initiative,” McGuire said.
The efforts have
focused on other key policies, including an Initiative objective to address
the need to shift the distribution of public resources from a focus on
incarceration only toward one that includes prevention programs fostering
the health, education and employment of youth.
The Pacific Center, along with other VPI
grantees, has helped change policy regarding the critical after-school
hours and its effect on youth. Research indicates that violence against
youth increases between the hours of 3 p.m. and 6 p.m. There is some evidence
that after-school programs not only help youngsters stay safe, but can
also increase academic performance. Most recently, the state provided an
ongoing allocation of $50 million annually to support after-school programs.
The Center has also taken advantage of
technology to facilitate the statewide networking of grantees and other
violence prevention experts by creating and managing an e-mail network
and website. After five years of training and networking,
community leaders, researchers and health professionals have formed a strong
constituency for educating the news media, public officials and other key
leaders in California about the public health approach to preventing violence.
PUBLIC EDUCATION TO INFORM AND MOBILIZE
ACTION
Shaping the public
discussion and perception of a complex issue like violence prevention requires
the use of many communications strategies, including mass media. We believed
it was important to fund a public education campaign in support of the
Initiative’s policy goals. In 1993 Martin & Glantz received a grant
to develop and implement a multimedia campaign.
The campaign supported the policy goals
and advanced two key messages: reduce the availability
of and access to handguns by youth, and create a greater awareness
and consideration of policies that will increase resources for programs
to prevent youth violence.
Throughout the Initiative,
Martin & Glantz has developed many phases of the public education campaign,
including “Youth Want You to Know,” an innovative effort to facilitate
the involvement of young people in policy discussions, and “Prevent Handgun
Violence Against Kids.”
The most recent phase of the campaign supports
the second goal of the VPI Policy Program: increasing support for youth
violence prevention programs. Titled “Resources for Youth: An Honest Dialogue
About Strategies to Prevent Youth Violence,” it has included
paid advertising, polling in local communities and efforts to draw news
media attention to the need to increase resources for youth locally and
state wide, such as after-school programs, job development and training
and violence prevention programs.
“One surprise for
us was how fast the campaign and its issues gained traction,” said Gina
Glantz, principal of Martin & Glantz. But there were lessons learned
throughout the campaign, among them the need for paid advertising rather
than relying upon free television and radio public service announcements
to disseminate key campaign messages. “We had to buy spots to reach the
people we were after,” Glantz said.
Martin & Glantz
usually divides audiences for a campaign message into two segments: the
general public, and opinion leaders and policymakers. To reach the public,
the firm used paid advertising in key markets and what Glantz calls “earned”
media to convince journalists to cover violence-related stories as a health
issue.
Opinion leaders were
reached through direct mailings of educational material they could use
in their policy efforts, including kits loaded with data, examples of effective
violence prevention tactics and re cent policy developments. Since the
start of the Initiative, Martin & Glantz has amassed a data base of
12,000 opinion leaders from 20 fields, among them business, education,
health, law enforcement and criminal justice.
The language used
by state policymakers and other opinion leaders to describe violence and
violence prevention has changed dramatically over the last five years.
It is now common to hear elected officials, community leaders and health
experts regularly quoted in the news media referring to violence as a “health
epidemic.” Many often cite information taken verbatim from the Initiative’s
public education campaign, including one often-quoted statistic that demonstrates
there are “more gun dealers than McDonald’s restaurants” in many California
communities.
As part of the campaign,
Martin & Glantz also organized two statewide video conferences
that connected via satellite hundreds of Initiative grantees, elected officials,
health experts, community leaders and law enforcement professionals in
communities throughout the state. The video conferences inspired policymakers
and frontline advocates to come together to discuss policy changes they
can make in their communities to prevent violence.
| “We do this because we don’t
want you to suffer this terrible loss. We do this because we want to protect
our other children. And we do it for ourselves because it helps us to heal.”
Mary Leigh Blek
Charles and Mary Leigh Blek
founded a grass-roots organization, Orange County Citizens for the Prevention
of Gun Violence, to inform the public, the media and policymakers that
gun injuries and deaths are preventable. Their son, Matthew, was shot and
killed with a Saturday night special handgun. |
POLICY EFFORTS FROM DIFFERENT PERSPECTIVES
In addition to the
main policy grantees, we have funded other important policy work. Among
them is a couple who experienced personal tragedy and channeled their pain
into action. Charles and Mary Leigh Blek founded the Orange County
Citizens for the Prevention of Gun Violence in 1995 in memory
of their son, Matthew, who was shot and killed in 1994 while in New York
City during a break from his senior year in college. The instrument of
death used in his murder was a Saturday night special
handgun, most of which are made in the place Matthew called home:
Southern California.
The Bleks—he an attorney,
she a registered nurse—founded the countywide grassroots organization
with the belief that gun violence “is a bipartisan,
public health and safety issue that crosses all political lines and social
classes.” Through the policy work of the organization, they inform
the public, the media and policymakers that gun injuries and deaths are
preventable. They also want us to remember that victims of violence
are not just statistics—they are beloved friends and family.
“We do this in memory of the loved ones
lost to us, our communities, our nation,” said Mary Leigh Blek. “We do
this because we don’t want you to suffer this terrible loss. We do this
because we want to protect our other children. And we
do it for ourselves because it helps us to heal.”
The Foundation also funded Mediascope,
an organization that works with the television and film communities to
search for solutions to the way complex social issues are portrayed in
entertainment. “A major concern is the way violence is depicted in entertainment,”
said Marcy Kelly, president and founder of Mediascope, a grantee that organized
forums, seminars and workshops. These activities involved entertainment
industry representatives in the development, promotion and adoption of
policies to improve the depiction of violence in the media.
As a result of these and other policy efforts,
the dialogue of violence prevention in California has shifted from an incarceration-only
perspective to one that includes a public health
approach for preventing violence against youth.
Initiative grantees are improving the health
of their communities through policy action, armed with new skills and information
drawn from research-driven policy, media advocacy and cohesive public education
messages.
| POLICY GRANTEES,1993-1998
Berkeley Media Studies Group
California Child, Youth and
Family Coalition
California Council of Churches
Center on Juvenile and Criminal
Justice
Commonweal
EPIC, State Department of
Health
Legal Community Against Violence
Martin & Glantz, LLC
Mediascope
Orange County Citizens for
the Prevention of Gun Violence
Pacific Center for Violence
Prevention/Trauma Foundation
Prevention Institute
Violence Prevention Coalition
of Greater L.A.
Women Against Gun Violence |
The California Wellness Foundation
6320 Canoga Avenue,
Suite 1700
Woodland Hills, CA 91367
(818) 593-6600
tcwf@tcwf.org |
|
http://www.StopGunViolence.org/
Orange County Citizens for the Prevention
of Gun Violence (Million Mom March)
Orange County Citizens for the Prevention
of Gun Violence is a county-wide grassroots organization dedicated
to the belief that all gun injuries and deaths are preventable.
We
approach
this epidemic of gun violence from a public health and safety perspective.
We provide education and advocate for prevention of gun violence at the
local, state and national levels. We work in coalition with many other
organizations in our county as well as with regional, state and national
groups in order to impact a broad range of issues associated with gun violence
and the quality of life.
http://www.StopGunViolence.org/brochure/brochure.htm
Orange County Citizens for the Prevention
of Gun Violence (Million Mom March)
Orange County Citizens for the Prevention
of Gun Violence was founded in 1995 by Charles and Mary Leigh Blek in memory
of their son, Matthew. Our organization is composed of people from all
segments of society who share their goal of reducing the kind of gun violence
that continues to result in tragedies like the death of Matthew. These
victims are not just statistics - they are our friends and loved ones.
We believe that gun violence is a bipartisan, public health and safety
issue that crosses all political lines and social classes.
Education is the biggest priority of Orange
County Citizens for the Prevention of Gun Violence. We provide
literature and fact sheets tothe public, media and to our local, state
and policy makers. A resource library is continuously updated and
maintained to keep current research available to all those interested in
the prevention of violence, especially gun violence.
Current information
is provided on bills and laws that will have an impact on gun violence
issues at the local, state and national levels, with more detailed information
for California and California community ordinances.
We communicate with our members in a variety
of ways. Currently we have a bi-monthly newsletter, The
Smoking Gun, and printed Action Alerts.
We notify members via fax and E-mail and hope to further
developments into fax and telephone "trees".
We have quarterly GENERAL MEETINGS with interesting
programs and dynamic informative speakers.
Of course, we communicate with our membership and community
via press conferences and other public
events.
What are some of the ways members work
toward the prevention of gun violence?
-
Speaking/Speakers Bureau
-
Volunteer at Exhibits and Displays of Our
Materials
-
Letter-Writing
-
Community Liaison to Other Community Groups
and Organizations
-
Attending and Supporting Rallies and Special
Events
Note that while attorney Charlie Blek
and his wife, Mary Leigh Blek of Mission Viejo in Orange
County, California, claim to be "long-time Republicans", they have
actively campaigned against Republican candidates for public office and
supported Democratic candidates. Although they may be registered to vote
as Republicans, which only requires that they be at least 18 years old
and U.S. citizens, they are actively working to promote the liberal soft-on-crime
Democratic Pary agenda and candidates for public office.
Also, when one loses a family member to
murder, a violent crime, that does not give one the moral authority or
credibility to promote proven dangerous counter-productive laws and
policies, such as gun control laws that increase violent crime and the
number of violent crime victims, and that are deeply rooted in racism and
discrimination.
|
http://www.PCVP.org/pcvp/advocates/blek3.shtml
Mary Leigh Blek, BS, RN, PHN

Cofounder, Orange
County Citizens for the Prevention of Gun Violence
"Gun deaths are preventable," says Mary
Leigh Blek, "but it takes a community effort." Mary Leigh and her husband,
Charles, have devoted themselves to that effort ever since their son, Matthew,
a college student, was the victim of an attempted robbery and was shot
to death with a "Saturday Night Special" in
New York City on June 29, 1994. Since Matt's death, the Bleks, long-time
Republicans and residents of Mission Viejo, have dedicated
themselves to spreading awareness about gun violence. In April 1995,
the Bleks founded Orange County Citizens for the Prevention of Gun Violence,
and Mary Leigh now works full-time speaking to city councils and community
groups, distributing factsheets, organizing presentations and exhibits
and alerting people to pending handgun legislation.
The Bleks were also
successful in persuading the Los Angeles Episcopal Diocese, representing
85,000 Episcopalians and 148 churches in six counties, to overwhelmingly
adopt resolutions calling for stricter handgun controls. "If change
is happening here in Orange County," Mary Leigh declares, "it can happen
anywhere."
Pacific Center for Violence Prevention
Permission is granted to distribute this
document in unaltered format.
Photo by Wyn Hilty, Courtesy of OC Weekly,
Costa Mesa, CA.
7/5/96
|
Orange County Citizens
for the Prevention of Gun Violence (Million Mom March) - founded by attorney
Charles Blek and his wife Mary Leigh Blek in 1995
http://www.MillionMomMarch.com/
http://www.StopGunViolence.org/
http://www.StopGunViolence.org/index.htm
http://www.TheBellCampaign.com/
Email
mailto:stopgunvio@aol.com
Domain Name:
StopGunViolence.org
Domain Name Registrant:
Timothy Blek (STOPGUNVIOLENCE-DOM)
19881 Calle Granada
Walnut, CA 91789
U.S.
Administrative Contact,
Billing Contact:
Blek, Timothy (TB6881)
t_blek@YAHOO.COM
Stop Gun Violence
25255 Cabot Road #102
Laguna Hills, CA 92653
909-620-0060
Technical Contact:
Operations, Network R
(JB8314) noc@HISPEED.COM
HiSpeed Technologies
330 Rancheros Drive #108
San Marcos, CA 92069
760-761-0495 (FAX) 760-744-3778
|
|
http://www.WAGV.org/index.htm
WOMEN AGAINST GUN VIOLENCE
Women Against Gun Violence, a coalition
of individual members and over 100 organizations throughout the state of
California, and particularly in the county of Los Angeles, is dedicated
to ending tolerance of gun violence by educating communities about the
human, financial, and public health costs of this epidemic and the dangers
of firearms proliferation.
Through educational programs, coalition
building, media advocacy, and resource support to policymakers, Women
Against Gun Violence informs the decision-making process, provides
current and comprehensive localized data on the gun violence toll, fosters
responsive public policy, and raises public awareness of gun violence as
a public health crisis.
Founded in 1994, Women Against Gun Violence
is guided by these principles:
-
We have the right to be free
from firearm violence in our homes, schools, neighborhoods, places of worship,
and workplaces.
-
Guns are more likely to kill
us than protect us.
-
Gun violence is a public
health, safety, social, and economic issue costing thousands of lives and
billions of dollars each year.
-
We all suffer from the epidemic
of gun violence and must mobilize to stop it now.
-
Guns are one of the leading
causes of violent injury and death in California. To prevent gun violence,
the availability of handguns, assault weapons, and ammunition must be curbed.
-
Consumer product safety laws
must apply equally to firearms.
http://www.WAGV.org/aboutus.htm
WOMEN AGAINST GUN VIOLENCE
A Coalition United to End Tolerance of
Gun Violence
Women Against Gun Violence (WAGV)
was launched in January of 1994 to address one of the leading issues of
our time:Gun Violence. Like all epidemics, gun violence has no boundaries
- not age, not gender, not income, not race or ethnicity, not geography.
We believe the California citizens, especially
women, can no longer stand by idly in the face of statistics and facts
such as these:
-
More children die in California from handguns
than from disease, drugs or car crashes.
-
Guns are involved in two-thirds of the domestic
deaths in California.
-
We all suffer from the epidemic of gun violence
and must mobilize to stop it now.
-
You are three times more likely to be attacked
at home by a person you know with a gun than by an armed stranger.
Women Against Gun Violence
-
"A Coalition United to
End Tolerance of Gun Violence"
"Women Against Gun Violence
(WAGV) was launched in January of 1994 to address one of the leading issues
of our time:Gun Violence. Like all epidemics, gun violence has no boundaries
- not age, not gender, not income, not race or ethnicity, not geography."
http://www.WAGV.org/
Women Against Gun Violence
- Resources
http://www.JoinTogether.org/plugin.jtml?siteID=WAGV&P=1
Women Against Gun Violence
P.O. Box 1501
Culver City, CA 90232-1501
Phone: 310.204.2348
Fax:
310.204.6643
Email: info@wagv.org
Domain Name:
WAGV.org
Domain Name Registrant:
Women Against Gun Violence
(WAGV-DOM)
8800 Venice Blvd., Suite
302
Los Angeles, CA 90034
US
Administrative Contact:
Benz, Tim (TB740)
tim@MLINET.COM
Global Exposure, Inc.
8800 Venice Blvd.
Los Angeles, CA 90034
(310) 842-7137 (FAX) (310)
842-7138
Technical Contact:
Domain Registration
(DR94-ORG) registrations@IMCONLINE.NET
Interactive Multimedia Corp.
PO Box 422392
Atlanta, GA 30342
U.S.
404-252-2972
Billing Contact:
Susan Shaw (SS140-ORG)
hn6628@HANDSNET.ORG
Women Against Gun Violence
8800 Venice Blvd., Suite
302
Los Angeles, CA 90034
U.S.
(310) 204-2348
Fax- (310) 204-6643
|
The TCWF web site contains the following
statement regarding its gun control and political lobbying agenda (as of
August 3, 2001):
|
http://www.TCWF.org/portfolio/2000/fall/pages/cover_story3.htm
Violence Prevention
ABOUT THIS PRIORITY AREA
The goal of this priority area is to support
and strengthen organizations that work to prevent violence against youth.
An emphasis will be placed on grants to organizations that provide mentoring
programs for youth, community-based conflict resolution programs, domestic
violence prevention, peer mediation, after-school programs and school-based
violence prevention programs. Grants will be made to organizations that
provide leadership development activities for violence prevention workers.
In
addition, the Foundation will also fund organizations that inform policymakers
and advocate for public policies that increase resources for programs that
prevent violence against youth and that reduce injury and death by firearms.
. . .
ABOUT ITS INITIATIVE
The overall goal of the Violence Prevention
Initiative is to improve the health of Californians by reducing violence
against youth through a range of statewide prevention efforts. Since youth
are disproportionately represented as victims of violence, this
initiative focuses on young people up to the age of 24.
To accomplish this goal, we must build
the capacity of individuals, communities and institutions to implement
and sustain violence prevention efforts.
VPI PUBLIC EDUCATOIN CAMPAIGN
A media campaign has been developed by
VPI's public education grantee, i.e. communications, to create messages
about policies that prevent violence against youth. The
public education campaign informs policymakers, opinion leaders and communities
about the specific kinds of local and state policies necessary to generate
public resources for programs that reduce violence against youth. The campaign
also disseminates information about the effects of violence on health and
effective preventive measures. To learn more about the campaign,
contact i.e. communications at 415.616.3930.
The California Wellness Foundation
6320 Canoga Avenue,
Suite 1700
Woodland Hills, CA 91367
(818) 593-6600
tcwf@tcwf.org |
The following is verbatim material from
the Trauma Foundation web site index (main) web page. Note that Mothers
Against Drunk Driving (MADD) would not have been taken seriously and would
not have been effective if they lobbied for laws to target and punish ordinary
law-abiding drivers by banning types of motor vehicles used by drunk drivers.
Yet this latter approach has been adopted with regards to violent crime
and firearms by the Trauma Foundation and the other "gun control" lobbying
organizations with which they are connected.
http://www.TF.org/
http://www.TF.org/index.html
TRAUMA FOUNDATION
at San Francisco General Hospital since
1975
Moving through Grief to Survivor Advocacy
What is Survivor Advocacy?
Grief resulting from a personal, traumatic
loss can come in an instant, without warning, into anyone's life. A small
number of people who survive the traumatic loss of a loved one channel
the force of their grief and shock into preventive action--they become
"survivor advocates," working to save others from having to experience
a similar loss and trauma. Survivor advocates have been central to some
of the major advances in the prevention of injury.
In 1975, Pete Shields became a spokesperson
for the newly formed Handgun Control, Inc. (now the Brady
Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence - http://www.bradycampaign.org)
after his 23 year old son was fatally shot in San Francisco. Candy Lightner
founded Mothers Against
Drunk Driving (MADD) (http://www.madd.org)
in 1980 after one of her 13 year old twin daughters was killed by a drunk
driver. Marilyn Spivak founded the National Head Injury Foundation (now
the Brain Injury Association
- http://www.biausa.org) in 1980, five years after her 15 year old
daughter sustained a disabling brain injury. Janette Fennel founded TRUNC
and Kids 'N Cars
(http://www.kidsncars.org)
after she and her husband had been locked in the trunk of their car by
a masked man in 1995. In the past several years, parents of children killed
by guns have mobilzed a survivor-led, grassroots public support for rational
gun policy which began as The Bell Campaign and evolved into the Million
Mom March (http://www.millionmommarch.org).
The Trauma Foundation has developed a web
site (http://www.tf.org/tf/advocates/advocate1.shtml)
which provides information, resources, a newsletter called, "Channeling
Grief into Policy Change," (http://www.tf.org/tf/images/IPNweb.pdf)
and organizing tools--memorials and a survivor advocacy bulletin board--to
make it easier for survivor advocates and injury prevention professionals
to find and help each other. The authentic voices and experiences of survivors
are crucial to sound prevention advocacy work. Survivor advocates' work
is personal and passionate. These are the qualities that make their message
so attractive to the media, persuasive to some policymakers, and aggravating
to their opponents. The power of the partnership between survivor advocates
and injury prevention professionals far exceeds the power of either working
alone. |
Trauma Foundation
used taxpayer funds provided by the federal
government Center for Disease Control (CDC) to lobby for a political agenda
to limit self-defense and other individual freedoms.
http://www.TF.org/tf/accomp2.html
(web page content on August
3, 2001)
"Accomplishments
. . .
Seat Belt Law
The Trauma Foundation organized a statewide
coalition of physicians, nurses, public health workers, and community advocates
who educated policy makers regarding the efficacy of a mandatory seat belt
use law in California in 1986.
Motorcycle Helmet Law
Beginning in 1987, the Trauma Foundation
worked with people whose lives had been significantly altered by motorcycle
crashes to advocate for a motorcycle helmet law. Since the law went into
effect in 1992, it has been credited with saving approximately one hundred
lives annually and reducing serious head injuries by forty-nine percent.
Assault Weapons Ban
The Trauma Foundation organized a coalition
of health care workers, policy makers, and community activists who advocated
for the assault weapons ban in California in 1989.
Alcohol Tax Initiative
In 1990, Andrew McGuire chaired the statewide
committee that ran the Alcohol Tax Initiative in California. Although the
nickel-a-drink tax failed at the November ballot, the State legislature
increased the alcohol tax six months later as a direct result of the November
initiative.
. . . " |
|