Washington Gov. Jay Inslee signed an executive order Wednesday aimed at curbing gun violence by improving data-sharing among government agencies and starting a new public health campaign on suicide prevention.
"We are not afraid to take action here in Washington state," Inslee said after criticizing inaction by Congress on gun violence.
The governor praised President Barack Obama's plan to take executive action to tighten control of firearms in the U.S. Obama's plan would create a more sweeping definition of gun dealers to increase the number of sales requiring background checks.
As the result of a 2014 voter-approved ballot measure, Washington state already has expanded background checks to include online sales and purchases at gun shows.
The initiative came as the state saw two mass shootings that year. In Marysville, a high school student killed three 14-year-old girls and a 15-year-old boy after inviting them to lunch in the cafeteria, authorities said. Earlier, a 19-year-old student was killed and two others wounded in a shooting at Seattle Pacific University.
In his executive order, Inslee said firearm deaths now exceed motor vehicle crash fatalities in the state and that 80% of firearm deaths are suicides.
Inslee, who is seeking re-election later this year, outlined his plans with representatives of the University of Washington School of Social Work and the director of the Harborview Injury Prevention and Research Center.
It calls for better data analysis of the effectiveness of current gun safety efforts; looking for failures in the state's current methods of sharing information among law enforcement and social service agencies; and eyeing gaps in the state's firearm purchasing laws.
Inslee wants to look into better adolescent depression screening, initiate a campaign focused on suicide prevention and develop culturally appropriate crisis-prevention and treatment services for Native Americans and Alaskan Natives.
"This will be a data-driven approach that helps us identify the people and places most susceptible to gun crime and suicide," Inslee said. "Gun crime is a scourge that has scarred thousands of families in every corner of our state. It's a scourge we can, should and will help prevent."
King County Sheriff John Urquhart said the governor's actions will help law enforcement get a better handle on where street guns are coming from and may help them follow-up on the people who try to buy guns but fail to do so because of the background check system.
Urquhart and other speakers said Inslee's proposals carefully skirt some of the most divisive issues involving guns and focus on things gun owners and gun haters can agree on.
"When you have bullies yelling, you can't have any progress," Urquhart said. "There's common ground there and we need to shame both sides into sitting down together."
Gun safety advocate Cheryl Stumbo, who was in the audience at the news conference, said she was pleased the governor is working to link mental health issues and gun violence.
Stumbo survived a 2006 shooting at the Jewish Federation of Greater Seattle.