The federal government is implementing measures that would require health workers seeking opportunities abroad to resign from their positions rather than apply for leave of absence before embarking on such journeys.
The directive was announced on Saturday by the Minister of State for Health, Dr. Tunji Alausa, following an executive order from President Bola Tinubu, which aims to curb the concerning trend of brain drain, also known as ‘Japa Syndrome,’ in the nation’s health sector.
Dr. Alausa also disclosed that the government has taken proactive measures to boost manpower production in the health sector, with annual nurse enrolment increasing from 28,000 to 68,000.
The minister, however, said that plans are underway to further raise this figure to 120,000 by year-end and emphased the need for abundant skilled personnel to seamlessly replace those departing.
The minister during his visit to the Neuro-Psychiatric Hospital, Aro, Abeokuta, Ogun State, addressed the challenges of manpower shortages, and highlighted the presidential directive.
He said, “The government is not unmindful of the Japa effect on our manpower in the health sector and the President has ordered for massive production of manpower such that when people go, there will always be a replacement.
“It is against this background that we are working intensely on the enrolment of our nurses. What used to be 28,000 is now 68,000 and we intend to take it to 120,000 by the end of the year, so there will always be abundant skilled manpower to take over from those leaving the job.
“We have equally doubled our enrolment for doctors, dentists, and pharmacists among others.
“Again, we didn’t say anyone who wants to move or japa to the UK or Australia to take up appointments there should not go, it is a free world.
“However, you cannot eat your cake and have it. If you are going, just resign your appointments with the Federal Government, rather than applying for leave of absence, that is the Presidential executive order that has been communicated to all the Chief Medical Directors of Federal Government-owned health facilities to implement.
“The problem with the leave of absence is that such a fellow is out there in the UK or Australia working, making money but his name still appears on the payment roll of the government and so to replace him is difficult because he is still being considered as a staff whereas he has left the country.
“So, to solve this problem, the President has directed that health workers going abroad to work should just resign their appointments and not apply for leave of absence.”
While acknowledging individuals’ freedom to work abroad, Alausa noted the broader impact on the health sector.
He said, “This way, you won’t be blocking others who want to work and, of course, piling burdens for your colleagues that you left behind.”
‘Resign Your Appointment If You Are Relocating Abroad’ -FG Stops Leave Of Absence For Health Workers is first published on The Whistler Newspaper
A video clip of President Joe Biden speaking about the Jan. 6, 2021, insurrection on the U.S. Capitol is being wrongly characterized as “new remarks.”
“Joe Biden: New remarks on Jan 6,” text over the video says in a March 6 Instagram post.
Biden says: “One Capitol police officer called it a medieval battle. He said he was more afraid in the Capitol of the United States of America in the chambers than when he was fighting as a soldier in the war in Iraq.”
This post was flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)
The footage is authentic, but it’s not new. It’s from Jan. 5, 2024, when Biden spoke on the eve of the attack’s third anniversary.
The No. 4 seed Chico State men’s basketball team was knocked out the California Collegiate Athletic Association tournament in a 84-76 loss to No. 5 Cal State East Bay on Thursday at Coussoulis Arena in San Bernardino.
Miles Daniels led the Wildcats with 17 points on 5-of-7 shooting, 3-of-4 on 3-pointers and 4-for-4 from the free-throw line. Evan Oliver had 14 points, Isaiah Kerr had 11 points and eight rebounds, and Jojo Murphy had 11 points and five rebounds.
The Wildcats trailed 49-37 at halftime. They outscored the Pioneers 39-35 in the second half, but came up short.
Chico State (20-8) will now await the NCAA West Region selection show at 7 p.m. Sunday to see if its season will continue.
Prep baseball
Chico High 10, University Prep 4: Chico won its first of two games Thursday in the Pleasant Valley Spring Classic.
Noah Meyer had two hits, Luke Henderson had two RBI and Blake Bettencourt had three RBI. Jake Heizer pitched four innings and allowed three hits, two earned runs, two walks and struck out three. Bettencourt pitched two innings, allowed one hit, two runs (none earned), walked one and struck out one.
In game two the Panthers lost 8-2 to Lincoln. Lincoln out-hit Chico 10-4, and the Panthers committed three errors on defense. Stephens and Bettencourt had one RBI each. Rex Edwards pitched 2 1/3 innings and allowed six hits, five earned runs, walked two and struck out three. Riley Bestor pitched 3 2/3 innings and allowed four hits, three runs (none earned), walked two and struck out one.
Chico (4-1) will continue tournament play Friday and Saturday.
Pleasant Valley 4, Golden Valley 3: PV scored two runs in the seventh inning to win via walk-off in the Vikings’ tournament Thursday.
Jacob Ortega led the Vikings with two hits and an RBI.
Zach Thompson, Kal-El Rodrigues-Darrin, Brayden Borges and Domenic Borges combined to pitch seven innings, allowing six hits, three earned runs, three walks and six strikeouts.
PV (4-0) continues tournament play Friday and Saturday.
Prep boys tennis
Chico 8, Foothill 1: Chico won its first Eastern Athletic League match Thursday in Chico, as the Panthers improved to 3-0 and 1-0 in EAL play.
Soren Granlund, Gabe Johnson, Carson Parent, Jackson Privett, Charlie Maidenburg and Gino Giannini won in singles for Chico. The doubles teams of Granlund and Parent, and Rocco Barroso and Luis Leschik won in doubles.
Chico plays next at 3:30 p.m. Monday in Orland, before returning to EAL play at 4 p.m. Tuesday in Red Bluff.
Pleasant Valley 9, Red Bluff 0: PV won in Red Bluff, improving to 2-0 and 1-0 in the EAL.
Modal Lee, Euvene Lee, Jimmy Lauderdale, William Pecks, Levi Pforsich and Lyle Aiken won their singles matches in straight sets.
The teams of Moodal Lee and Lauderdale, Euvene Lee and Gavin Anderson, and Aaron Mesfin and Andrew Roos won in doubles for PV.
The Vikings play next at 4 p.m. Friday at home against Shasta, before hosting Enterprise at 4 p.m. Tuesday.
Report scores or results by emailing sports@chicoer.com. Results must be reported by noon the next day following the date that the game was played.
(Trice Edney Wire) – Whoever would have thought fossil fuel industry front groups would make whales and other marine species a cultural wedge issue? However, thanks to a deception campaign targeting wind energy that’s exactly where we find ourselves.
The Marine Mammal Stranding Center in New Jersey rescues and rehabilitates live beached animals and performs necropsies on the remains of dead ones to pinpoint their causes of death. Sheila Dean, one of the group’s founders, describes how the rampant misinformation connecting whale deaths to sonar used in surveying the seafloor for offshore wind farms is making her job more difficult. And it is distracting people from what is really killing the whales: vessel strikes, climate change, plastic pollution, and entanglement in fishing gear and marine debris.
“I’ve been doing this for 47 years. We had a lot of whale deaths in 2023 but there have been years we’ve had more. In 2013 we had a lot of whales and dolphins washing up. Our necropsy data show a wide variety of possible causes of death, including blunt force trauma from suspected vessel strikes. If the sonar from mapping was killing marine life, our shores likely would have been littered with hundreds, if not thousands of dead and dying marine mammals.”
The frenzy that has been whipped up against offshore wind energy has thrust Dean’s organization into the storm. Anti-wind activists and the people they have duped are demanding close examination of whale’s ears to show signs of damage from sonar. But most beached whale remains are in an advanced state of decomposition, making that impossible. Where there have been beached animals that have not been too decomposed, mostly dolphins, the MMSC and its partners have gone the extra mile and incurred great cost for CT scans and lab analysis. The results? No evidence of auditory trauma.
Scientists have been clear. Disruptions in the whales’ feeding patterns, water salinity, and currents are likely the result of climate change. Dean points out the whales are following their food source, which is what brings them into the shipping lanes.
Finding no evidence that sonar mapping for offshore wind farms is connected to the whale deaths, groups like Dean’s are being targeted as if they are part of some cover up fueled by the wind industry. Dean is clear that her organization takes no money from the wind industry.
Meanwhile, the real problems behind the increase in whale deaths go unaddressed. And with climate change perhaps the largest overriding problem, and our transition away from fossil fuels to clean energy the solution… well, it is not hard to see how this is by design.
Lies and deceit have always been the stock-in-trade of the fossil fuel industry’s public relations and lobbying efforts. Back in 2009 when I was national president of the NAACP, the lobbying firm for a major coal industry group faked a letter to Congress from our Albemarle-Charlottesville chapter in Virginia to stop a climate bill. The letter even used NAACP letterhead and declared opposition to the American Clean Energy and Security Act, a bill we actually supported!
So let us follow the money behind the rising tide of local front groups opposing offshore wind development. The organizing efforts and litigation come from organizations with benign names like the American Coalition for Ocean Protection and Save Right Whales. Those organizations link back to dark money groups like the Texas Public Policy Foundation, the Caesar Rodney Institute, and the Committee for a Constructive Tomorrow. And those groups are funded by fossil fuel interests like ExxonMobil and the Charles Koch Foundation. Major players include operatives who have been on the forefront of climate denial for years and involved in previous political smear jobs like the Swiftboat Veterans for Truth.
These groups opposing wind energy are not just screaming their lies into the wind. They are shifting public opinion. A Monmouth poll shows public support for New Jersey’s offshore wind projects has dropped from 76 percent to 54 percent in the wake of the disinformation campaign around whale deaths.
The Northeast as a region has been among the most forward-thinking when it comes to the use and development of renewable energy. If these groups are successful in blocking the development of renewable energy adoption and production in the Northeast, it does not bode well for the rest of the country. And the fossil fuel industry knows it.
We are already seeing Big Oil and Gas target solar with blatant misinformation targeted at communities across the country. A recent NPR report detailed how one group connected to polluters and climate deniers, the so-called Citizens for Responsible Solar, “has helped local groups fighting solar projects in at least 10 states including Ohio, Kentucky and Pennsylvania.”
So if it has not already, misleading campaigns of the fossil fuel industry could be coming to a town near you. Remember if you see a group opposing clean energy, it is usually a good idea to follow the money behind the message.
Ben Jealous is the Executive Director of the Sierra Club and a Professor of Practice at the University of Pennsylvania.
Virginia Gov. Glenn Youngkin (R) signed two bills aimed at at legacy admissions at public colleges in the state Friday.
“No public institution of higher education shall provide any manner of preferential treatment in the admissions decision to any student applicant on the basis of such student’s legacy status or such student’s familial relationship to any donor to such institution,” the identical bills’ text reads.
The bills’ signing by the governor comes amid a nationwide discussion about legacy admissions, which allows family members of alumni and donors to get a boost in their chances in the admissions process for colleges and universities. Over 100 colleges and universities have stopped legacy preferences since 2015, according to a report from the nonprofit Education Reform Now.
Some of the schools that have ended the practice include Wesleyan University, Occidental College and the University of Minnesota.
Discourse around legacy admissions have heated up in the wake of a Supreme Court ruling last year that struck down affirmative action and prevented schools from taking into account race in admissions. Colorado was the first state to ban legacy preferences back in 2021.
On the same day of the Supreme Court ruling, President Biden took a swing at legacy admissions and directed the Education Department to study “practices like legacy admissions and other systems that expand privilege instead of opportunity.”
“Virginia showed we could work in a bipartisan way to end the practice of legacy preferences,” state Sen. Schuyler VanValkenburg (D), who introduced the Senate bill, said in a post on X, the platform formerly known as Twitter Friday.
Copyright 2024 Nexstar Media Inc. All rights reserved. This material may not be published, broadcast, rewritten, or redistributed.
Fake News Network once again carries water for the Biden regime and criminal illegal aliens.
CNN refused to air a conservative group’s political ad blaming Joe Biden for the death of 22-year-old Laken Riley, who was killed by an illegal alien.
“I am told that CNN is refusing to air this. They ran out the clock on a pre-SOTU ad buy — then rejected it, calling several of its claims unsubstantiated. Fox and MNSBC aired it,” Fox News correspondent Guy Benson reported Friday.
I am told that CNN is refusing to air this. They ran out the clock on a pre-SOTU ad buy — then rejected it, calling several of its claims unsubstantiated. Fox and MNSBC aired it. In case you missed it: https://t.co/4osMsLypnf
Building America’s Future said that all the other major media networks, including Fox News, MSNBC, and Newsmax, accepted the ad.
“CNN and Joe Biden are in lockstep once again: they won’t even #sayhername,” the group’s advisor Phil Cox said in a statement to National Review.
Our fan-favorite Turbo Force Plus is now 40% off! See for yourself the delicious one-of-a-kind energy boost infowarriors CRAVE!
“It is shameful that CNN is censoring the truth and trying to protect President Biden by refusing to air this ad,” Cox added. “The American people understand that Biden’s open borders agenda is responsible for the death of Laken Riley. Building America’s Future won’t be deterred when it comes to the important work of informing the public on how we are all less safe in Joe Biden’s America.”
The ad begins with a voiceover saying that Riley “should have been able to go on a run in broad daylight without being murdered by an illegal immigrant.”
“But Joe Biden promised not to deport illegal immigrants,” the voiceover adds, quoting the president’s own words. “Biden vowed not to detain illegal immigrants who cross the border.”
The video cuts to Biden arguing that local police should not turn over illegal aliens to federal authorities.
“So when Jose Ibarra was arrested in New York City for endangering a child, he was freed a second time. Ibarra went to Georgia, where he beat Laken Riley to death. How many more killers has Biden set free?” the ad asks.
The 60-second clip was part of a $700,000 television ad buy that aired nationally and in key battleground states, including Arizona, Georgia, Michigan, Pennsylvania, and Wisconsin during Biden’s State of the Union address on Thursday.
Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) called on Biden during his address to say Riley’s name.
When confronted by Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene (R-Ga.) to say Riley’s name during his address, Biden responded by calling her “Lincoln Riley.”
BREAKING: President Biden says "Lincoln Riley" after Marjorie Taylor Greene interrupts him and tells him to "say her name."
What Biden meant to say was "Laken Riley."
Laken Riley was murdered by an illegal immigrant who entered into the United States thanks to Biden's open… pic.twitter.com/BuBywN4JFd
“An innocent young woman who was killed by an illegal,” Biden said. “But how many…thousands of people are being killed by illegals? To her parents, I say my heart goes out to you, having lost children myself. I understand.”
The police in Lagos State have arrested a mother for attempting to kill her sick child using a poisonous insecticide known as “Sniper’’.
The police spokesman in the state, SP Benjamin Hundeyin, told the News Agency of Nigeria (NAN) on Saturday that the Lagos University Teaching Hospital, Idi-Araba, reported the attempt to the police on Friday.
He said the chief security officer at the hospital reported to the police that the mother brought her one-year-and-seven months’ old daughter to the hospital for treatment.
He added that the mother confessed to a doctor at the hospital that she gave the child “Sniper’’ to drink on Sunday when her convulsion was not abating.
“The mother said she gave the liquid to her child so she could rest from her excessive convulsions.
“Detectives were immediately dispatched to the hospital where they met the baby receiving treatment.
“The mother has been taken in for investigation after the child had received treatment,’’ Hundeyin said.
Mother Who Tried Killing Her Baby With Sniper Arrested In Lagos is first published on The Whistler Newspaper
President Joe Biden’s March 7 State of the Union address lasted about one hour and seven minutes.
During the speech, Biden occasionally paused for applause or diverged from his planned remarks to spar with GOP lawmakers in the audience.
But there was no intermission, despite a social media post’s claim that Biden’s team was planning untraditional pauses in the speech.
“White House announces there will be 2 ‘intermissions’ during tonight’s State of the Union,” read an X post screenshot shared March 7 on Instagram. That X post, also dated March 7, was written by Sean Spicer, former press secretary to former President Donald Trump.
Spicer posted on X at 9:41 a.m. Eastern Time and clarified soon after that it was a joke — but not before social media users moved to share the post without context.
Not long after Spicer’s initial post, another X user asked: “Is this a joke? Please say this is a joke.”
Spicer replied: “Joke right now. But I won’t put it past them.”
(Screenshot from X.)
Images of his X post that did not make clear it was a joke were flagged as part of Meta’s efforts to combat false news and misinformation on its News Feed. (Read more about our partnership with Meta, which owns Facebook and Instagram.)
(Screenshot from Instagram.)
“So the docs said he doesn’t need a cognitive exam and he’s not too old…” read the caption on the Instagram post, referring to Biden’s recent physical. “But they will need to break this state of the union up.”
As they pursue second terms, both Biden, 81, and Trump, 77, face concern from voters over their respective ages and health and fitness.
As for claims about a State of the Union pause, however, we found no news reports or announcements on White House communication channels that Biden would have any intermission during his address.
Since Biden’s speech has happened, we can also confirm: There was no intermission.
We rate this claim Pants on Fire!
RELATED:Fact-checking Joe Biden’s 2024 State of the Union address
RELATED:Fact-checking Katie Britt’s immigration claims in Republican 2024 State of the Union response
SANTA CLARA — The 49ers now own 11 picks in next month’s NFL Draft, an abundance of assets should they choose to trade up on draft weekend.
Friday brought five compensatory picks the 49ers’ way. The highest of that group – third round, No. 99 overall – is already ticketed for Washington via October’s trade acquisition of defensive end Chase Young. That pick originally came via the NFL’s minority hiring incentive, a reward for the departures of Ran Carthon (Tennessee Titans general manager) and DeMeco Ryans (Houston Texans coach).
The 49ers own a first-round pick for the first time since 2021, when they selected Trey Lance at No. 3 overall for what essentially was a two-year tryout; Lance got dealt to Dallas last August for a fourth-round pick in next month’s draft, which will be held in Detroit.
The compensatory picks also assured the 49ers of a spot in at least each round. General manager John Lynch has swung at least one trade in every of the past seven drafts except in 2022.
Here are the 11 spots currently assigned to the 49ers (complete NFL Draft order follows):
First round: No. 31 overall
Second round: No. 63
Third round: No. 94
Fourth round: No. 123 (via Dallas, in trade of Trey Lance), No. 130, No. 132 (compensatory pick)
Seventh round: No. 232 (via Denver in trade for Randy Gregory), No. 251
Both the Los Angeles Rams and the Philadelphia Eagles joined the 49ers in receiving four compensatory picks, the most in the NFL, for player movement in 2023 free agency.
Factoring into the 49ers’ compensatory selections were the losses of Jimmy Garoppolo, Mike McGlinchey, Samson Ebukam, Jimmie Ward, Azeez Al-Shaair, Daniel Brunskill, Charles Omenihu, Hassan Ridgeway and Emmanuel Moseley. Those were only offset by the acquisitions of Javon Hargrave, Sam Darnold, Clelin Ferrell and Isaiah Oliver.
Here is the complete NFL Draft order:
1. Chicago from Carolina
2. Washington
3. New England
4. Arizona
5. LA Chargers
6. NY Giants
7. Tennessee
8. Atlanta
9. Chicago
10. NY Jets
11. Minnesota
12. Denver
13. Las Vegas
14. New Orleans
15. Indianapolis
16. Seattle
17. Jacksonville
18. Cincinnati
19. LA Rams
20. Pittsburgh
21. Miami
22. Philadelphia
23. Houston from Cleveland
24. Dallas
25. Green Bay
26. Tampa Bay
27. Arizona from Houston
28. Buffalo
29. Detroit
30. Baltimore
31. San Francisco
32. Kansas City
SECOND ROUND
33. Carolina
34. New England
35. Arizona
36. Washington
37. LA Chargers
38. Tennessee
39. NY Giants
40. Washington from Chicago
41. Green Bay from NY Jets
42. Minnesota
43. Atlanta
44. Las Vegas
45. New Orleans from Denver
46. Indianapolis
47. NY Giants from Seattle
48. Atlanta from Jacksonville (Conditional)
49. Cincinnati
50. Philadelphia from New Orleans
51. Pittsburgh
52. LA Rams
53. Philadelphia
54. Cleveland
55. Miami
56. Dallas
57. Tampa Bay
58. Green Bay
59. Houston
60. Buffalo
61. Detroit
62. Baltimore
63. San Francisco
64. Kansas City
THIRD ROUND
65. Carolina
66. Arizona
67. Washington
68. New England
69. LA Chargers
70. NY Giants
71. Arizona from Tennessee
72. NY Jets
73 Detroit from Minnesota
74. Atlanta
75. Chicago
76. Denver
77. Las Vegas
78. Seattle
79. Atlanta from Jacksonville (Conditional)
80. Cincinnati
81. Seattle from New Orleans through Denver
82. Indianapolis
83. LA Rams
84. Pittsburgh
85. Cleveland
(Choice forfeited by Miami)
86. Houston from Philadelphia
87. Dallas
88. Green Bay
89. Tampa Bay
90. Arizona from Houston
91. Green Bay from Buffalo
92. Detroit
93. Baltimore
94. San Francisco
95. Kansas City
96. Jacksonville (Compensatory Selection)
97. Philadelphia (Compensatory Selection)
98. LA Rams (Special Compensatory Selection)
99. Washington from San Francisco (Special Compensatory Selection; via October trade for Chase Young)
FOURTH ROUND
100. Carolina
101. Washington
102. New England
103. Arizona
104. LA Chargers
105. Tennessee
106. NY Giants
107. Minnesota
108. Atlanta
109. Chicago
110. NY Jets
111. Las Vegas
112. NY Jets from Denver
113. Jacksonville
114. Cincinnati
115. Jacksonville from New Orleans
116. Indianapolis
117. Seattle
118. Pittsburgh
119. Pittsburgh from LA Rams
120. Denver from Miami
121. Chicago from Philadelphia
122. Houston from Cleveland
123. San Francisco from Dallas
124. Tampa Bay
125. Green Bay
126. Houston
127. Buffalo
128. Minnesota from Detroit
129. Baltimore
130. San Francisco
131. Kansas City
132. San Francisco (Compensatory Selection)
133. Buffalo (Compensatory Selection)
134. Baltimore (Compensatory Selection)
FIFTH ROUND
135. Cleveland from Carolina
136. New England
137. Arizona
138. Washington
139. LA Chargers
140. NY Giants
141. Carolina from Tennessee
142. Atlanta
143. Chicago
144. Denver from NY Jets
145. Tennessee from Minnesota through Philadelphia
146. Denver
147. Las Vegas
148. Cincinnati
149. New Orleans
150. Indianapolis
151. Seattle
152. Jacksonville
153. LA Rams
154. LA Rams from Pittsburgh
155. Cleveland from Philadelphia through Arizona
156. Minnesota from Cleveland
157. Miami
158. Kansas City from Dallas
159. Buffalo from Green Bay
160. Philadelphia from Tampa Bay
161. Arizona from Houston
162. Buffalo
163. Detroit
164. Baltimore
165. Carolina from San Francisco (2022 Christian McCaffrey trade)
166. Minnesota from Kansas City
167. New Orleans (Compensatory Selection)
168. Green Bay (Compensatory Selection)
169. New Orleans (Compensatory Selection)
170. Philadelphia (Compensatory Selection)
171. Philadelphia (Compensatory Selection)
172. Kansas City (Compensatory Selection)
173. Dallas (Compensatory Selection)
174. New Orleans (Compensatory Selection)
175. San Francisco (Compensatory Selection)
SIXTH ROUND
176. Minnesota from Carolina through Jacksonville
177. Carolina from Arizona
178. Washington
179. New England
180. LA Chargers
181. Tennessee reacquired through Philadelphia
182. NY Giants
183. Miami from Chicago
184. NY Jets
185. Arizona from Minnesota
186. Atlanta
187. Minnesota from Las Vegas through New England
188. Buffalo from Denver through LA Rams
189. New Orleans
190. Indianapolis
191. Seattle
192. Jacksonville
193. Cincinnati
194. Pittsburgh
195. LA Rams
196. Atlanta from Cleveland
197. Miami
198. New Orleans from Philadelphia
199. Buffalo from Dallas through Houston
200. Tampa Bay
201. Green Bay
202. Cleveland from Houston
203. Buffalo
204. Detroit
205. Cleveland from Baltimore
206. Denver from San Francisco (as part of October’s trade for Randy Gregory)
207. Las Vegas from Kansas City
208. Cincinnati (Compensatory Selection)
209. LA Rams (Compensatory Selection)
210. Philadelphia (Compensatory Selection)
211. San Francisco (Compensatory Selection)
212. Jacksonville (Compensatory Selection)
213. LA Rams (Compensatory Selection)
214. Cincinnati (Compensatory Selection)
215. San Francisco (Compensatory Selection)
216. Dallas (Compensatory Selection)
217. LA Rams (Compensatory Selection)
218. NY Jets (Compensatory Selection)
219. Green Bay (Compensatory Selection)
220. Tampa Bay (Compensatory Selection)
SEVENTH ROUND
221. Tennessee from Carolina
222. Washington
223. Las Vegas from New England
224. Houston from Arizona
225. LA Chargers
226. Arizona from NY Giants
227. Tennessee
228. Baltimore from NY Jets
229. Las Vegas from Minnesota
230. Minnesota from Atlanta through Cleveland and Arizona
231. New England from Chicago
232. San Francisco from Denver (as part of October’s Randy Gregory trade)
Illustration credit: Oona Tempest/KFF Health News. (Reference photos of Buggs, Cook, Crifasi, Cunningham, Daly, Hemenway, Webster: Christine Spolar for KFF Health News; Rosenberg: Getty Images; Wintemute: University of California-Davis.)
By Christine Spolar
Gun violence has exploded across the U.S. in recent years — from mass shootings at concerts and supermarkets to school fights settled with a bullet after the last bell.
Nearly every day of 2024 so far has brought more violence. On Feb. 14, gunfire broke out at the Super Bowl parade in Kansas City, killing one woman and injuring 22 others. Most events draw little attention — while the injuries and toll pile up.
Gun violence is among America’s most deadly and costly public health crises. But unlike other big killers — diseases like cancer and HIV or dangers like automobile crashes and cigarettes — sparse federal money goes to studying gun violence or preventing it.
That’s because of a one-sentence amendment tucked into the 1996 congressional budget bill: “None of the funds made available for injury prevention and control at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention may be used to advocate or promote gun control.”
Its author was Jay Dickey, an Arkansas Republican who called himself the “point man” for the National Rifle Association on Capitol Hill. And for nearly 25 years the amendment was perceived as a threat and all but paralyzed the CDC’s support and study of gun violence.
Even so, a small group of academics have toiled to document how gun violence courses through American communities with vast and tragic outcomes. Their research provides some light as officials and communities develop policies mostly in the dark. It has also inspired a fresh generation of researchers to enter the field — people who grew up with mass shootings and are now determined to investigate harm from firearms. There is momentum now, in a time of rising gun injury and death, to know more.
The reality is stark:
Gun sales reached record levels in 2019 and 2020. Shootings soared. In 2021, for the second year, more people died from gun incidents — 48,830 — than in any year on record, according to a Johns Hopkins University analysis of CDC data. Guns became the leading cause of death for children and teens. Suicides accounted for more than half of those deaths, and homicides were linked to 4 in 10.
Black people are nearly 14 times as likely to die from firearm violence as white people — and guns were responsible for half of all deaths of Black teens ages 15 to 19 in 2021, the data showed.
Harvard research published in JAMA in 2022 estimated gun injuries translate into economic losses of $557 billion annually, or 2.6% of the U.S. gross domestic product.
With gun violence touching nearly every corner of the country, surveys show that Americans — whatever their political affiliation or whether they own guns or not — support policies that could reduce violence.
What Could Have Been
It is no secret that many strategies proposed today — from school metal detectors to enhanced policing, to the optimal timing and manner of safely storing guns, to restrictions on gun sales — have limited scientific ballast because of a lack of data.
It could have been otherwise.
U.S. firearm production surged in the late 1980s, flooding communities with more than 200 million weapons. In that era, Mark Rosenberg was the founding director of the CDC’s National Center for Injury Prevention and Control and his agency, over time, was pivotal in helping to fund research on gun violence and public health.
Rosenberg thought then that gun violence could go the way of car crashes. The federal government spent $200 million a year on research to redesign roadways and cars beginning in the 1970s, he said, and had seen death rates plummeted.
“We said, ‘Why can’t we do this with gun violence?’” Rosenberg said. “They figured out how to get rid of car crashes — but not cars. Why can’t we do the same thing when it comes to guns?”
The Dickey Amendment sidelined that dream.
A study published in 1993 concluded that “guns kept in the home are associated with an increase in the risk of homicide,” a finding on risk factors that prompted an uproar in conservative political circles. To newly elected representatives in the midterm “Republican Revolution” of 1994, the research was a swipe at gun rights. The NRA stepped up lobbying, and Congress passed what’s known as the Dickey Amendment in 1996.
Some Democrats, such as the influential John Dingell of Michigan (a onetime NRA board member who received the group’s “legislative achievement award”), would join the cause. Dingell proposed his own bills, detailed last summer by The New York Times.
Under heavy political pressure, the CDC ousted Rosenberg in 1999. Soon after, some CDC administrators began alerting the NRA to research before publication.
“It was clearly related to the work we were doing on gun violence prevention,” Rosenberg, now 78, said of his job loss. “It was a shock.”
Those Who Persevered
The quarter-century spending gap has left a paucity of data about the scope of gun violence’s health effects: Who is shot and why? What motivates the violence? With what guns? What are the injuries? Can suicides, on the rise from gunfire, be reduced or prevented with safeguards? Does drug and alcohol use increase the chances of harm? Could gun safeguards reduce domestic violence? Ultimately, what works and what does not to prevent shootings?
If researchers say they “lost a generation” of knowledge about gun violence, then American families lost even more, with millions of lives cut short and a legacy of trauma passed down through generations.
Imagine if cancer research had been halted in 1996 — many tumors that are now eminently treatable might still be lethal. “It’s like cancer,” said Rebecca Cunningham, vice president for research at the University of Michigan, an academic who has kept the thread of gun research going all these years. “There may be 50 kinds of cancer, and there are preventions for all of them. Firearm violence has many different routes, and it will require different kinds of science and approaches.”
Cunningham is one of a small group of like-minded researchers, from universities across the United States, who refused to let go of investigating a growing public health risk, and they pushed ahead without government funds.
Garen Wintemute has spent about $2.45 million of his money to support seminal research at the University of California-Davis. With state and private funding, he created a violence prevention program in California, a leader in firearm studies. He has documented an unprecedented increase in gun sales since 2020 — about 15 million transactions more than expected based on previous sales data.
Daniel Webster at Johns Hopkins University focused on teenagers and guns — particularly access and suicides — and found that local police who coped with gun risks daily were willing to collaborate. He secured grants, even from the CDC, with carefully phrased proposals that avoided the word “guns,” to study community violence.
At Duke University, Philip J. Cook explored the underground gun market, interviewing people incarcerated in Chicago jails and compiling pivotal social science research on how guns are bought, sold, and traded.
David Hemenway, an economist and public policy professor at Harvard, worked on the national pilot to document violent deaths — knowing most gun deaths would be recorded that way — because, he said, “if you don’t have good data, you don’t have nothin’.”
Hemenway, writing in the journal Nature in 2017, found a 30% rise in gun suicides over the preceding decade and nearly a 20% rise in gun murders from 2014 to 2015. The data was alarming and so was the lack of preventive know-how, he wrote. “The US government, at the behest of the gun lobby, limits the collection of data, prevents researchers from obtaining much of the data that are collected and severely restricts the funds available for research on guns,” he wrote. “Policymakers are essentially flying blind.”
His work helped create the most ambitious database of U.S. gun deaths today — the National Violent Death Reporting System. Funded in 1999 by private foundations, researchers were able to start understanding gun deaths by compiling data on all violent deaths from health department, police, and crime records in several states. The CDC took over the system and eventually rolled in data from all 50 states.
Still, no federal database of nonfatal gun injuries exists. So the government would record one death from the Super Bowl parade shooting, and the 22 people with injuries remain uncounted — along with many thousands of others over decades.
Philanthropy has supported research that Congress would not. The Joyce Foundation in Chicago funded the bulk of the grants, with more than $33 million since the 1990s. Arnold Ventures’ philanthropy and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation have added millions more, as has Michael Bloomberg, the politician and media company owner. The Rand Corp., which keeps a tab of ongoing research, finds states increasingly are stepping up.
Timothy Daly, a Joyce Foundation program director, said he remembers when the field of gun harm was described by some as a “desert.” “There was no federal funding. There was slim private funding,” he said. “Young people would ask themselves: ‘Why would I go into that?’”
Research published in JAMA in 2017 found gun violence “was the least-researched” among leading causes of death. Looking at mortality rates over a decade, gun violence killed about as many people as sepsis, the data showed. If funded at the same rate, gun violence would have been expected to receive $1.4 billion in research funds. Instead, it received $22 million from across all U.S. government agencies.
There is no way to know what the firearm mortality or injury rate would be today had there been more federal support for strategies to contain it.
A Reckoning
As gun violence escalated to once unthinkable levels, Rep. Dickey came to regret his role in stanching research and became friends with Rosenberg. They wrote a pivotal Washington Post op-ed about the need for gun injury prevention studies. In 2016, they delivered a letter supporting the creation of the California Firearm Violence Research Center.
Both men, they emphasized, were NRA members and agreed on two principles: “One goal must be to protect the Second-Amendment rights of law-abiding gun owners; the other goal, to reduce gun violence.”
Dickey died in 2017, and Rosenberg has only kind words for him. “I did not blame Jay at all for what happened,” he said. The CDC was “under pressure from Congress to get rid of our gun research.”
As alarm over gun fatality statistics from diverse sectors of the nation — scientists, politicians, and law enforcement — has grown, research in the field is finally gaining a foothold.
Even Congress, noting the Dickey Amendment was not an all-out ban, appropriated $25 million for gun research in late 2019, split between the CDC — whose imperative is to research public health issues — and the National Institutes of Health. It’s a drop in the bucket compared with what was spent on car crashes, and it’s not assured. House Republicans this winter have pushed an amendment to once again cut federal funding for CDC gun research.
Still, it’s a start. With growing interest in the field, the torch has passed to the next generation of researchers.
In November, Cunningham helped organize a national conference on the prevention of firearm-related harm. More than 750 academics and professionals in public health, law, and criminal justice met in Chicago for hundreds of presentations. A similar event in 2019, the first in 20 years, drew just a few dozen presentations.
“You can feel momentum,” Cunningham said at the conference, reflecting on the research underway. “There’s a momentum to propel a whole series of evidence-based change — in the same way we have addressed other health problems.”
During a congressional hearing weeks later, Yale University School of Public Health Dean Megan L. Ranney bluntly described the rising number of gun deaths — noting the overwhelming number of suicides — as an alarm for lawmakers. “We are turning into a nation of traumatized survivors,” she said, urging their support for better data and research on risk factors.
Cassandra Crifasi, 41, was a high school sophomore when the Columbine massacre outside Littleton, Colorado, shook the country. She recently succeeded Webster, her mentor and research partner, as co-director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Violence Solutions.
Crifasi has spent much of her career evaluating risk factors in gun use, including collaborative studies with Baltimore police and the city to reduce violence.
Raised in Washington state, Crifasi said she never considered required training in firearms an affront to the Second Amendment. She owns guns. In her family, which hunted, it was a matter of responsibility.
“We all learned to hunt. There are rules to follow. Maybe we should have everybody who wants to have a gun to do that,” she said.
Crifasi pointed to the 2018 shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High in Parkland, Florida — which left 17 dead and 17 injured — as a turning point. Students and their parents took “a page out of Mothers Against Drunk Driving — showing up, testifying, being in the gallery where laws are made,” she said.
“People started to shift and started to think: This is not a third rail in politics. This is not a third rail in research,” Crifasi said.
Shani Buggs worked in corporate management before she arrived at Johns Hopkins to pursue a master’s in public health. It was summer 2012, and a gunman killed 12 moviegoers at a midnight showing of “The Dark Knight Rises” in Aurora, Colorado. The town’s pain led the national news, and “rightfully so,” Buggs said. “But I was in Baltimore, in East Baltimore, where there were shootings happening that weren’t even consistently making the local news.”
Now violence “that once was considered out of bounds, out of balance — it is more and more common,” said Buggs who recently joined the California Firearm Violence Research Center as a lead investigator.
Buggs’ research has examined anxiety and depression among youths who live in neighborhoods with gun violence — and notes that firearm suicide rates too have drastically increased among Black children and adolescents.
There is a trauma from hearing gunshots and seeing gun injuries, and daily life can be a thrum of risk in vulnerable communities, notably those largely populated by Black and Hispanic people, Buggs said. Last year, Buggs organized the Black and Brown Collective with a core group of about two dozen scientists committed to contextualizing studies on gun violence.
“The people most impacted by the gun violence we usually hear about in America look like our families,” she said of the collective.
“They are not resilient. People are just surviving,” Buggs said. “We need way more money to research and to understand and address the complexity of the problem.”
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