The Columbus Dispatch

‘Do something:’ Leaders must react to gun violence

- Your Turn Howard Rahtz Guest columnist

As the country reels from the Oxford school shooting, the tragedy is heightened by the opportunit­ies missed to avert this disaster.

Media reports have focused on the role played by the accused killer’s parents and the failure of the school threat assessment process undergone only minutes before the shooting began.

The apparent parental failure to secure the weapon, indeed even providing the weapon to their son, is unfortunat­ely not a new element in these incidents.

The shooter at Sandy Hook Elementary killed 15 children using a rifle purchased for him by his mother. In roughly 70% of all school shootings, the gun used came from the home, a relative or friend of the shooter.

The Oxford shooting is also a failure of the threat assessment process, a key factor in preventing such tragedies.

The assessment team meeting with the student and his parents did not include a police officer. Where the threat of violence is noted, law enforcemen­t needs to be present.

Every good police officer in the country, given the threat of a gun, would have secured the backpack, searched the student locker, and completed a pat down prior to any conversati­on between school personnel and the student.

A particular­ly disturbing image from Oxford was video of a teacher scrambling to barricade the classroom door to prevent the shooter’s entry. Since Columbine, study groups studying school shootings have recommende­d dozens of steps to physically secure buildings and classrooms. No school shooter has ever breached a locked classroom door.

What is predictabl­e is preventabl­e. We know that next week, or the week after that, or six months from now, parents, students and teachers at another school will be living through a new episode of this national nightmare.

We are not helpless in the face of these tragedies. Mandating safe storage of guns is a commonsens­e step. Mandatory safe gun storage will not only prevent some school shootings but can reduce the killing and wounding of over 10,000 Americans each year in so-called gun “accidents.” There is also strong evidence safe-storage laws reduce gun suicides.

After Sandy Hook, President Obama worried that mass shootings were becoming accepted by Americans as the “new normal.” His concern was wellplaced, but I believe attitudes are changing.

Americans are sick of gun violence. They are also sick of the excuse that nothing will work. The United States is a country of creative people without peer in technologi­cal proficienc­y and organizati­onal expertise. The position that the country is helpless in the face of this violence is absurd.

The crowd at a Dayton vigil for victims of the August 2019 gun attack spoke for America when they chanted, “Do something,” at Ohio’s government leaders. “Do something” was a citizen demand for the end to complacenc­y and denial on gun violence.

It is time for America’s government officials, educators, law enforcemen­t, clergy, mental health profession­als, business leaders and others to sit down and address this problem.

It is not insolvable. Let’s get to work.

Howard Rahtz is a retired Cincinnati Police captain and author of “Shots Fired: Gun Violence in the United States.”

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