Crime & Safety

Gun Violence Awareness Day In AZ: Wear Orange, Other Things To Know

There are two events this weekend in Phoenix and another set to happen in Tucson. In 2020 gun violence killed more kids than car crashes.

Elise Schering, 7, displays a simple message during a National Gun Violence Awareness Day rally at the Capitol in Sacramento, California on Thursday.
Elise Schering, 7, displays a simple message during a National Gun Violence Awareness Day rally at the Capitol in Sacramento, California on Thursday. (Rich Pedroncelli/Associated Press)

ARIZONA — Friday is National Gun Violence Awareness Day this year — but with the Uvalde, Texas, school shooting, the racism-driven Buffalo, New York, supermarket shooting and the Tulsa, Oklahoma, hospital shooting on Wednesday, Arizonans probably don't need a reminder that gun violence continues to plague our country.

If you're looking to show support for Gun Violence Awareness Day, you could attend a local Wear Orange event — we’ll have more about why later.

Some local events:

Find out what's happening in Across Arizonafor free with the latest updates from Patch.

  • Wear Orange with the Phoenix Mercury WNBA players during their game at 7 p.m., Friday at the Footprint Center, 201 E. Jefferson St. in Phoenix.
  • Phoenix Wear Orange event in conjunction with Soldier's Best Friend, 10:30 a.m. Saturday at Church of the Beatitudes, 555 W. Glendale Ave. in Phoenix.
  • Tucson Wear Orange event, 6 p.m. Saturday at Southside Presbyterian Church, 317 W. 23rd St. in Tucson.

These events are some of dozens of gun violence awareness events around the country, sponsored by the Everytown for Gun Safety organization and its partners.


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Find out what's happening in Across Arizonafor free with the latest updates from Patch.


Adding urgency to the observances: In 2020, gun violence killed more children than car crashes, for many years the leading cause of death among children, according to researchers who took a deep dive into federal Centers for Disease Control and Prevention gun mortality data. Their findings were published as a research letter in the New England Journal of Medicine.

They found that from 2019 to 2020, gun-related deaths jumped by nearly 30 percent among Americans ages 1-19.

Overall, gun violence spiked to a 25-year high in 2020, the CDC said in a report last month.

That year, the latest for which data is available, 79 percent of all homicides and 53 percent of all suicides involved guns, and the firearms homicide rate surged 35 percent from 2019, the CDC said.

Gun violence has taken a toll here as well.

In Arizona, the firearms mortality rate in 2020 was 16.7 per 100,000 people, with a total of 1,265 deaths.


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Here are more things to know about Gun Violence Awareness Day:

How Did It Start?

The first Gun Violence Awareness Day was held on June 2, 2015, on what would’ve been Hadiya Pendleton’s 18th birthday. She was fatally shot on a Chicago playground on Jan. 29, 2013, when she was 15, and a week after she marched in President Barack Obama’s second inaugural parade.

Once a single-day commemoration, it has grown to a three-day observance in cities around the country. People are encouraged to wear orange throughout the June 3-5 weekend.

Why Wear Orange?

Shortly after her death, Pendelton’s friends began wearing orange — the color hunters wear as a safety measure — to commemorate her life.

Erica Ford of the New York-based gun violence prevention program Life Camp Inc. spearheaded the effort to make orange the defining color of the movement. Now it’s worn across the country to bring awareness to the hundreds of people injured or wounded by gun violence every day, according to organizers.

How To Show Support

One of the best ways to counter gun violence is through policy, according to the Wear Orange organization. Its website provides a link to email one's U.S. senators and urge them to vote on House-approved gun reform legislation that has been stalled since 2019.

Be aware the link goes to a boilerplate message from Everytown for Gun Safety. You can direct original letters to:

Sen. Mark Kelly
Sen. Kyrsten Sinema

More links take gun violence prevention activists to social media tool kits, photo and video management, coloring pages and other resources.

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