Toronto city council is taking some heavy and decisive steps to address gun violence city-wide in the wake of a mass shooting on the Danforth Sunday night.

One of these steps involves asking the federal government to ban handgun sales in Toronto. Another will see council request Ontario ban the sale of ammunition locally.

Councillors voted 41-4 in favour of these specific measures during a marathon meeting at City Hall on Tuesday evening, but the marquee agenda item they fell under — a set of proposals called "Immediate Steps to Address Gun Violence" — carried unanimously with a vote of 45-0.

The sweeping gun control motion was unveiled well-ahead of the shooting in Toronto's Greektown neighbourhood on Sunday, but was amended to include some additional requests in recent days (such as one that would ensure local trauma recovery programs include culturally-appropriate resources).

This motion by Councillor Joe Cressy asks the federal government to ban the sale of hand guns in Toronto, and the provincial government to ban the sale of ammo. pic.twitter.com/ihuisHFUZG — Matt Elliott (@GraphicMatt) July 24, 2018

While tragic, the recent Danforth shooting was only the latest in a series of high-profile gun death incidents in Toronto this summer.

As of Monday, there had been 228 shootings this year. A total of 308 victims were injured by gunfire in these incidents, 29 of them fatally.

The number of shootings in Toronto is up roughly 11 percent over this time last year, but the number of shooting deaths has gone up by a startling 71 percent.

The city is well on pace for one of its deadliest years in history, and the recent frequency of what police call "brazen" downtown shootings has intensified public concern to levels not seen since 2005's "summer of the gun."

Toronto Mayor John Tory and Police Chief Mark Saunders announced earlier this month that 200 police officers would be dispatched to "priority areas" around the city between 7 p.m. and 3 a.m., for the remainder of the summer, in an effort to curb the violence.

Both have attributed much of the shooting activity to gangs, but there's clearly more at play here — hence the more in-depth plan presented at City Hall this week.

Thread worth a read. Toronto City Councillors voted on variety of gun violence motions. Spoiler Alert -> councillor put a motion on feasibility of a citywide curfew for people under 15 (it failed). How did your city councillor do? Municipal elections set for Oct. 22 #TOvotes18 https://t.co/cuWnldLUEP — Vadim Levin (@Vadim_Levin) July 25, 2018

In addition to asking for help from Justin Trudeau's Liberal government and Doug Ford's Ontario PCs, City council approved the following gun control initiatives during Tuesday's meeting, as per CBC Toronto:

Approving funding for ShotSpotter technology, which uses microphones to detect gunfire and automatically informs police.

Asking the province to fulfil its promise to provide $1.9 billion in funding for mental health supports and programs.

Increasing funding for the Youth Equity Strategy by $2.6 million.

Asking the chief coroner of Ontario to conduct inquests into all gun-violence deaths.

Implementing a gun amnesty buyback program.

Using funding from the city's reserve fund to immediately hire 100 new police officers.

Investigating gun clubs and shooting ranges in the city to see if they are operating legally.

Looking into the city acquiring and repurposing gun clubs for civic purposes.

The five-year-plan is estimated to cost around $44 million in total, all of which the City hopes will come in the form of federal and provincial funding.

These funds have not yet been approved, but if they are, at least $7.4 million will be spent this year alone on such things as enhanced surveillance and enforcement projects.

This includes the installation of 40 new CCTV security cameras around the city and, eventually, the potential rollout of the controversial "gunshot listening" technology ShotSpotter.

More than $1 million of the first funding round will also be spent on youth violence prevention initiatives and the expansion of Toronto's Community Crisis Response Program.