An Arizona state legislative report on child deaths that advocates for the removal of all firearms from homes with children has drawn criticism from two lawmakers for violating the Second Amendment.
The report cited that the leading causes or manners of preventable deaths in 2023 were motor vehicle crashes, firearm injuries, suffocation, fentanyl poisoning, and drowning.
“Sixty-eight children died due to a firearm injury in 2023, and we have seen a staggering 171 percent increase in child deaths to firearms in the past decade,” the report noted.
The report said that all of the 68 firearm deaths in 2023 were determined to be preventable.
“Since the CFRP determined that access to guns was the most significant risk factor for firearm deaths, CFRP believes that the most effective way to prevent firearm-related deaths in children is to remove all firearms in households with children because the presence of firearms in a household increases the risk of suicide among adolescents.
“Parents of all adolescents should remove all guns from their homes, especially if there is a history of mental health issues or substance use issues.
“In addition, CFRP recommends that all gun owners should practice safe storage of their firearms by keeping guns unloaded and locked in a safe separate from the ammunition.”
“We are appalled that the CFRT, speaking on behalf of the Arizona Department of Health Services, is actually advocating for stripping Arizonans of their Second Amendment rights in their own homes,” the lawmakers wrote.
As chairman of Arizona’s House Judiciary Committee, Nguyen said that “proposals to strip citizens of their firearms are not only unconstitutional but also lack common sense.
“While the report suggests reasonable safety measures for other risks, such as drowning, the CFRT overreaches by advocating for the elimination of firearms entirely from homes with children.”
Both lawmakers said that effective policy solutions to problems that are hard and complicated should protect constitutional rights and liberties and not work to undermine them.
In 2019, before the coronavirus pandemic, there were 1,732 gun deaths involving minors under the age of 18. According to the report, that number had risen to 2,590 by 2021.
These children died in a variety of ways, such as suicides, gun-related accidents, and homicides, the report said.