Husband died less than hour after
alleged attack.
By BERNARD HARRIS, Staff Writer
It was the face of 9-year-old Ciara Savage staring from the newspaper page
that moved Lancaster Mayor Rick Gray to action.
The Lancaster girl was killed in a gang drive-by
shooting in York on Sunday.
"It just makes you
sick," Gray said Tuesday night.
For Gray, Savage put another face on the
problem of illegal guns on the streets. And on Tuesday, he urged Lancaster City
Council members to resurrect a proposed ordinance that would require gun owners
to report lost or stolen guns to police.
Council members voted
unanimously to do so and the proposal will be on council's May 26 agenda. A vote
on the measure could occur June 9.
The proposed city law is intended to
inform police that the gun may be in the wrong hands and to curb illegal "straw
man" purchases in which someone who can legally buy a gun does so for a
convicted felon who cannot.
The proposal was tabled in October when
similar city ordinances faced legal challenges. Gray said Tuesday those legal
challenges still have not been resolved, but that he feels Lancaster and other cities
must act because state legislators have not done so.
"If it means a
lawsuit, it means a lawsuit," the mayor said. "But, I think we have the
authority to do it and I think we have the moral authority to do it," he said of
enacting the ordinance.
The proposal would require any gun owner who has
a gun lost or stolen in the city to report it to police within 72 hours of
discovering a gun is missing.
Savage was playing outside the York home of her aunt when
police believe a gunman drove by and fired at rival gang members. The girl was
hit in the back by one of the four shots fired.
"That just brought it
home," Gray said Tuesday. "I'm not waiting anymore. Other cities are doing it
and I think our city should too."
Harrisburg passed a similar measure late last
month. The state's capital city became the sixth Pennsylvania city to enact such a law, the
Harrisburg Patriot-News reported. It followed Allentown, Reading,
Pittsburgh, Pottsville and Philadelphia.
The National Rifle
Association and other gun owners rights groups have challenged the Pittsburgh and Philadelphia laws in court arguing that only
the state and federal governments have the authority to enact gun control
measures. The cities have responded they have the right to act because they are
attempting to control illegally obtained guns, not those in the possession of
law-abiding gun owners.
Staff writer Bernard Harris can be reached
at bharris@LNPnews.com or
481-6022.