Page 4A OPINION East Oregonian Thursday, November 12, 2015 Founded October 16, 1875 KATHRYN B. BROWN DANIEL WATTENBURGER Publisher Managing Editor JENNINE PERKINSON TIM TRAINOR Advertising Director Opinion Page Editor OUR VIEW Keep following the wolf plan For years, everyone has played graph continues in that direction, by the rules of the Oregon Wolf Plan wolf numbers will clearly grow — including ranchers and hunters, exponentially. environmental groups and impartial It won’t always, of course. observers. So it makes sense that Predator and prey numbers move the plan itself would decide when to up and down in relation to each play by a new set. other. Bad winters are a debilitating The Oregon Fish and Wildlife IDFWRUDVDUHZLOG¿UHV6RWRRDUH Commission voted 4-2 earlier this human-controlled effects: hunting, week to remove wolves from the and the much more devastating loss state’s endangered species list. of habitat. Animals west of Oregon is a great highways 395, 20 place to live. Its Plain and and 97 remain under population centers federal protection, are expanding, and simple, the but the vote opens its climate means Oregon Wolf the door to future that humans and controlled wolf wolves are both Plan worked. hunts in Eastern thriving within its Oregon. That’s There are now borders. Yet we because of a 2011 humans are 81 animals in know federal delisting ill-suited to sharing for our neck of the space with other the state. woods, as well as species. across state lines in But it is Idaho. Oregonians who welcomed the Yet as fascinating as it is to wolf back, and ODFW biologists focus on the future of wolves in who protected it for years and then Oregon and what delisting could recommended delisting once the mean moving forward, we should science — and the wolf plan — take this moment to look back. supported that conclusion. Each step Plain and simple, the Oregon Wolf denotes progress. It was admirable Plan has worked. There are now 81 for us to try to allow a native species animals in the state, and they are to regain a foothold in Oregon. And slowly expanding their territory and now that it’s here in sustainable numbers, we have to let wildlife population to the south and west. managers do their job. Although 81 is not a number that Certainly environmental groups strongly suggests to biologists that will sue, and the OFWC’s decision wolves are completely safe from extirpation again, it crosses the will be argued in court. But threshold set by the plan: Multiple decisions on wildlife should be made wolves having multiple offspring by research and compromise and over multiple years. If the population results — not judges. Unsigned editorials are the opinion of the East Oregonian editorial board of Publisher Kathryn Brown, Managing Editor Daniel Wattenburger, and Opinion Page Editor Tim Trainor. Other columns, letters and cartoons on this page express the opinions of the authors and not necessarily that of the East Oregonian. OTHER VIEWS How can we prevent school shootings? By (Medford) Mail Tribune A s Oregon and the nation debate the best way to respond to mass shootings in schools and other places, most of the disagreement stems from disputes between those who focus on gun restrictions and those who see those restrictions as an infringement on their rights that wouldn’t prevent future violence. But there is another approach that everyone ought to be able to agree on: early intervention with individuals who show warning signs associated with mass shootings. The FBI’s Behavorial Analysis Unit works aggressively to head off potential shootings, often by getting high-risk individuals into treatment. In 2013, a year after the Sandy Hook Elementary School shooting in Newtown, Conn., the FBI’s Behavioral Threat Assessment Center estimated it had prevented 148 potential mass shootings that year alone. In Oregon, the Salem/Keizer School District has a nationally recognized, interagency program called the Mid Valley Threat Assessment System. The program combines a Student Threat Assessment System with a Threat Advisory Team focused on adults. :KLOHWKHUHLVQRIRROSURRISUR¿OH of mass shooters, there are recurring characteristics: most are male; most are white, between 20 and 40 years old. Many are loners from troubled families who may exhibit a fascination with guns, nurse grievances and have a mental illness. 7KHGLI¿FXOW\LVWKDWPDQ\SHRSOH¿W WKDWSUR¿OHZKRZLOOQHYHUFRPPLWDQ act of violence. But in many cases when a mass shooting has occurred, those close to the shooter saw warning signs they either did not recognize or did not report. When reports are made, trained threat assessment specialists can respond and get the troubled individual they help they need. The Salem/Keizer team had one early success that ultimately ended in tragedy. A story in Mother Jones magazine described the team’s efforts to provide support for Erik Ayala, a McNary High School student who threatened to shoot classmates in 2000 and then was hospitalized after a suicide attempt. The newly formed threat assessment team gave Ayala counseling, tutoring and support from friends. That worked, until Ayala moved to Portland in 2009, where his support system lost track of him. He became increasingly depressed, ERXJKWDJXQDQGRSHQHG¿UHRXWVLGH The Zone, an underage nightclub, killing two and injuring seven. In the successful part of that case, as in many others, the key was a classmate who reported Ayala’s threat of violence, setting the intervention in motion. Last month, two Josephine County high school students were arrested in separate cases after each issued threats of violence. In each case, someone reported the teenagers to authorities. One was released to his parents; the other, ZKRKDGDPDVVHGDQDUVHQDORI¿UHDUPV and stockpiled body armor and talked of shooting police, remained in custody at last report, charged with weapons-related crimes. Even before a crime is committed, however, threats or other troubling behavior can surface, and friends, family members or others should not hesitate to notify authorities. At that point, a trained team can respond and prevent a tragedy. Local school districts should explore creating a team like the one in Salem. State legislators could facilitate that by offering grants to offset the costs. And all of us should be ready to speak up if a loved one or an acquaintance exhibits troubling behavior or makes statements about harming others. It may save more than one life. Many people fit the profile, but will never commit an act of violence. OTHER VIEWS Voters, you can have everything! I confess, as much as I am troubled interests, that’s his choice to make. But by Donald Trump’s anti-immigrant, it’s just wrong.” DQWLIUHHWUDGHWLUDGHV,GR¿QG7KH That is truly Orwellian: At a time Donald’s campaign strategy truly when the GOP has become a wholly interesting. He’s not, as people say, owned subsidiary of the oil and gas an “anti-politician.” He’s actually industry, Ryan accuses Obama of caricaturing politicians. And like any catering to special interests; he calls the JUHDWFDULFDWXULVW7UXPSLGHQWL¿HVKLV president’s decision to block a pipeline subject’s most salient features and then to transport tar sands oil, one of the Thomas exaggerates them. Friedman dirtiest fuels in the world, “sickening” In Trump’s case, the feature he’s and labels combating climate change a Comment identifying is the ease with which “special interest.” This guy belongs in career politicians look right into a the Republican debates. camera and lie or embellish. Since so many Alas, though, the next president will not be SROLWLFLDQVKDGFRPHWR7UXPS¶VRI¿FHVHHNLQJ governing in fantasy — but with some cruel his money or endorsement when he was just math. So the gap between this campaign and a businessman, and told him whatever they the morning after is likely to make for one thought he wanted to hear, he’s obviously an really cold shower. Start with geopolitics. The size of the expert in their shtick. And so Trump has just governance hole that taken the joke to the next ZRXOGKDYHWREH¿OOHGWR level. simultaneously destroy the Indeed, if I were writing Islamic State, or ISIS, defeat a book about this campaign, Syria’s dictator, Bashar it would open with Trump’s Assad, and rebuild Syria, Sept. 27 CBS “60 Minutes” Iraq, Yemen and Libya into interview. Trump touts his self-sustaining governments plan for universal health is staggering. And yet the care, telling Scott Pelley, cost of doing too little — “I am going to take care endlessly bleeding refugees of everybody.” And when into our allies Turkey, Pelley asks how, Trump Jordan, Lebanon and the gives the greatest quote so European Union — is far of the 2015 campaign: also astronomical. When “The government’s the cost of action and the gonna pay for it. But we’re cost of inaction both feel going to save so much unaffordable, you have a wicked problem. money on the other side. But for the most Not only do the tax-cutting plans offered [part] it’s going to be a private plan and people by the leading Republican candidates create are going to be able to go out and negotiate H\HSRSSLQJGH¿FLWVEXWVRPH'HPRFUDWLF great plans with lots of different competition with lots of competitors, with great companies tax hike proposals don’t quite add up, either. As the Washington Post economics columnist — and they can have their doctors, they can Robert Samuelson reported last week, a have plans, they can have everything.” Brookings Institution study found that even if I just love that last line: “They can have the top income tax rate were increased to 50 their doctors, they can have plans, they can percent from 39.6 percent, it would cover less have everything!” WKDQDTXDUWHURIWKHGH¿FLWIRUWKH¿VFDO And the best part is that it was not said year, let alone generate funds for increased on “Saturday Night Live.” It was on “60 investment. Minutes.” Poor Jeb Bush, he just can’t go If we want to invest now in more that far. He’s just a standard-issue political infrastructure — as we should do — and make exaggerator. (See his economic plan.) Trump is the caricature, the industrial version. That’s sure we don’t overburden the next generation why you can’t tell the difference when he’s on to pay for all the retiring baby boomers, “SNL” or on “60 Minutes.” something will have to give, or as Samuelson Mario Cuomo famously said: “You put it: “If middle-class Americans need or campaign in poetry. You govern in prose.” want bigger government, they will have to pay Trump says, in effect: That’s for normal hack for it. Sooner or later, a tax increase is coming politicians. I will campaign in fantasy and their way. There is no tooth fairy.” govern in prose. Why not?” $QG¿QDOO\ZLWKFDUERQGLR[LGHOHYHOVLQ Given how ludicrous some of the GOP the atmosphere having just reached heights presidential tax plans are, Trump seems to not seen in millennia, if we want to “manage have started a you-can-have-everything arms the unavoidable” effects of climate change and race. Even Bernie Sanders is promising free “avoid the unmanageable” ones, it will surely tuition at public colleges, more Social Security require a price on carbon — soon. EHQH¿WVDQGIUHHFKLOGFDUHWREHSDLGPRVWO\ So enjoy the fun of this campaign while it by taxing the top 1 percent — no trade-offs lasts, because the next president will not be necessary for the middle class. governing in poetry or prose or fantasy — but And the new House speaker, Paul Ryan, with excruciating trade-offs. The joke is on us. who isn’t even running, has joined in. Ryan Ŷ described Obama’s decision to kill the Thomas L. Friedman won the 2002 Pulitzer Keystone XL pipeline project as “sickening,” Prize for commentary, his third Pulitzer for adding: “If the president wants to spend the The New York Times. He became the paper’s UHVWRIKLVWLPHLQRI¿FHFDWHULQJWRVSHFLDO foreign-affairs Op-Ed columnist in 1995. The gap between this campaign and the morning after is likely to make for one really cold shower. LETTERS POLICY The East Oregonian welcomes original letters of 400 words or less on public issues and public policies for publication in the newspaper and on our website. The newspaper reserves the right to withhold letters that address concerns about individual services or letters that infringe on the rights of private citizens. Submitted letters must be signed by the author and include the city of residence and daytime phone number. Send letters to 211 S.E. Byers Ave. Pendleton, OR 97801 or email editor@eastoregonian.com.