A gun is discharged in a US school about once a week: advocacy group analysis

Since 2013, the group has counted about 220 gun incidents in schools, colleges.

The advocacy organization began tracking shootings in schools, including colleges and universities, after the December 2012 massacre at a Newtown, Connecticut, elementary school that killed 26.

The group's analysis doesn't go back far enough to include the deadliest school shooting in history, which occurred 10 years ago today, on April 16, 2007, when Virginia Tech student Seung-Hui Cho killed 32 students and faculty.

But Everytown's figures, unlike some other tallies of gun violence, include shootings even if they are accidental or don't result in any injuries or fatalities.

The list tracks “any time a firearm discharges a live round inside a school building or on a school campus or grounds,” which could include suicides, accidental discharges, and criminal activity, such as gunfire related to an armed robbery, according to the website of Everytown, which is backed by billionaire and former New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg.

This broad definition of school shootings has led to some criticism from gun rights advocates who argue that the Everytown's statistics present gun violence in schools as more common than it is.

But Everytown says on its website that its definition of school firearms incidents is “straightforward, fair, and comprehensive." It covers "any time a firearm discharges a live round inside a school building or on a school campus or grounds, as documented by the press and, when necessary, confirmed through further inquiries with law enforcement of school officials."

Here’s a timeline of recent gun discharges and shootings in United States, based on Everytown’s findings and with the addition of the 2012 elementary school shooting in Newtown, Connecticut.

Sandy Hook: December 2012

In the aftermath, President Obama signed 23 executive actions in January 2013 related to gun control, but two major pieces of federal gun legislation in the wake of the shooting both failed to pass the Senate.

2013

Everytown lists 37 firing incidents at U.S. schools in 2013.

2014

Gun incidents rose in 2014, according to Everytown's research, jumping to 58.

Paine College, a historically black liberal arts school in Augusta, Georgia, was the site of two shootings in as many days, on May 4 and May 5, the second of which was a drive-by shooting.

In the first shooting, JaJuan L. Baker, the victim, was shot in the head after a confrontation that took place on the third floor of a school administrative office. She survived, according to the Augusta Chronicle.

The second gun incident was a drive-by shooting.

2015

Gunfire incidents rose again in 2015, to 65, according to Everytown.

On Oct. 9, Chris Harper-Mercer killed nine people at Umpqua Community College in Oregon. He had six guns with him at the school and seven additional guns at his home, according to officials.

The New York Times reported that Harper Mercer had an awkward exchange with a teacher a week prior to the shooting, who was among those killed.

Police engaged Harper-Mercer in a brief shootout, and wounded him, according to police.

After that, he committed suicide by shooting himself in the head, police said.

2016

Everytown lists fewer shootings in 2016 – 48.

One example is a shooting that took place July 25 of last year in Ava, Missouri. Everytown for Gun Safety lists a description of it as follows:

"Two 18-year-old boys who recently graduated from high school together met in the school parking lot to fight in a dispute about a girl," the group writes. "One of the boys, Paul Porter, pulled out a handgun and shot the other, Payton Esterline, in the chest, and then shot and killed himself. Esterline was taken to a local hospital and placed in intensive care. Ava Police announced they were investigating the incident, and did not immediately announce how Porter acquired the handgun."

ABC Springfield, Missouri, affiliate KSPR-TV reported at the time that Paul Porter suffered from depression, and that friends witnessed him commit suicide on school grounds.

Payton Esterline, who was shot three times, survived after having his spleen removed, according to the station.

2017

Of the 12 shootings Everytown lists so far this year, four were attacks, the most recent of which was in San Bernardino, California, Monday, when gunman Cedric Anderson entered North Park Elementary School armed with a .357 revolver and opened fire on his wife, teacher Karen Elaine Smith, killing her and also an 8-year-old student caught in the crossfire. Anderson then turned the gun on himself, San Bernardino Police Chief Jarrod Burguan said at a news conference Monday afternoon.

But it’s prior shootings this year that help highlight some of the seemingly more mundane incidents that fail to garner national news.

One of them took place Friday, April 7, in St. Paul, Minnesota, when a University of St. Thomas student was wounded in an accidental shooting.

The injured student, who survived, according to ABC St. Paul-Minneapolis affiliate KSTP-TV, was in a separate room from someone handling a gun when the weapon accidentally discharged, according to a news release from the school.

'A uniquely American problem’

School shootings are a "uniquely American problem," according to Daniel Webster, director of the Johns Hopkins Center for Gun Policy and Research and co-director of the Johns Hopkins Center for the Prevention of Youth Violence, who described them as part of the general problem of U.S. gun violence.

"Gun violence in America goes way beyond our schools," Webster told ABC News. "Goes back to how we failed to adequately regulate firearms and set standards for safety.”

U.S. homicide rates are 7.0 times higher than in other high-income countries, driven by a gun homicide rate that is 25.2 times higher, according to a 2016 study in The American Journal of Medicine.

Americans are actually far less likely to be shot in a school than elsewhere their own communities, Webster said, but people tend to pay more attention when children are involved.

"We’re troubled by it,” he said, “and we should be because we feel that that last place anyone should be shot is inside of a school.”