Community Corner

The Madison ‘Wear Orange’ Events To Protest Gun Violence

Nearly 750 of events nationwide will take place beginning June 7 to call for an end to gun violence. See the events near Madison.

Nearly 750 of events nationwide will take place beginning June 7 to call for an end to gun violence.
Nearly 750 of events nationwide will take place beginning June 7 to call for an end to gun violence. (Photo credit: Jim Young/Getty Images)

MADISON, NJ - Don’t be surprised to see a sea of orange shirts, shoes, socks and headbands in and around Madison this weekend. Nearly 750 grassroots events are planned nationwide from Friday through Sunday to call for an end to gun violence.

The so-called “Wear Orange 2019” campaign events are part of the fifth annual National Gun Violence Awareness Day on June 7. Right in Madison, Mayor Robert H. Conley presented a proclamation to volunteer representatives from Moms Demand Action at Monday's Council Meeting, where he proclaimed June 7, 2019 as National Gun Violence Awareness Day.

Madison's proclamation encourages all citizens to wear orange to support their local communities' efforts to prevent the tragic effects of gun violence and to honor and value human lives.

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

Here are the details of an event near Madison:

Morris County's Turn South Street Orange for Gun Violence Awareness

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

Morristown City Hall
200 South St
Morristown, NJ 07960
Friday, June 7, 10 a.m.

Join us for Morris County Moms Demands Action Wear Orange (WO) Gun Violence Awareness Event. We will meet on the steps of Morristown Town Hall and we will "paint" South Street Orange by decorating the steps of Town Hall Orange, tying ribbons around lamp posts, changing church spotlights to orange and having store owners hang WO placards in their storefront window.

More than 100 Americans are killed with guns every day, according to the organization, and guns are the second-leading cause of death for American children. The events, dedicated to honoring victims of gun violence, are meant to elevate the “voice of every American who demands an end to gun violence” throughout the weekend.

Organizers chose the color orange in honor of 15-year-old Hadiya Pendleton, who was gunned down in Chicago a week after performing at President Barack Obama’s second inaugural parade in 2013. Pendleton’s friends wore orange in her honor.

Gun safety advocates are spearheading the effort, which has attracted brand partners including Levi Strauss & Co. and Dick’s Sporting Goods, as well as celebrities including Julianne Morre, Laura Dern and Keegan-Michael Key. Other cultural influencers and more than 200 mayors plan to partake, as well as Democratic U.S. Sen. Dick Durbin of Illinois.

Dozens of large events are planned in cities such as Baltimore, Boston, Denver, Detroit, Houston, Las Vegas, Seattle, San Francisco, South Bend, Tampa and Washington, D.C., organizers said. Moreover, major landmarks and retail stores plan to turn orange as well, including the famed Empire State Building in New York City.

The event comes days after 12 people were killed in a mass shooting at Virginia Beach Municipal Center. As Patch previously reported, mass shootings have become commonplace in America. The Virginia shooting was one of 156 mass shootings as of Monday, which marked just the 154th day of the year. Shootings can only be eligible for the database if at least four people are shot or killed, excluding the gunman.

Americans make up just 4.4 percent of the world's population but own 42 percent of the world's guns, according to a 2016 study by Adam Lankford, an associate criminology and criminal justice professor at the University of Alabama.

Lankford told Patch this week that about 31 percent of all public mass shooters attack in America. If mass shootings were evenly distributed, that number would be closer to 5 percent or less, he said.

Patch national staffer Dan Hampton contributed to this report.

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