REGIONAL Wallowa.com Wednesday, June 8, 2022 A17 Wyden says GOP faces ‘question of our time’ on gun bills By PETER WONG Oregon Capital Bureau Democrat Sen. Ron Wyden says it’s up to Republican colleagues in the U.S. Senate to show whether they are serious about fed- eral fi rearms restrictions after two mass shootings this month in Buff alo, New York, and Uvalde, Texas. The Senate debated such legislation most recently in 2013, after the 2012 shoot- ings at Sandy Hook Ele- mentary School in New- town, Connecticut, claimed the lives of 20 children and six adults. But the Senate fell short of the 60 votes required to advance legis- lation without a fi libuster, although Wyden and Dem- ocratic Sen. Jeff Merkley voted for it. The Senate is now in recess for Memorial Day — and a group of Democratic and Republican senators began talks to see if there is a basis for legislation. “That is the question of our time. You noticed how I approached it: The next 10 days are really crucial,” Wyden told reporters Friday, May 27, in the lobby of the federal building where he has his Portland offi ce. “The question of com- mon-sense gun reform is not an either/or proposition. We protect the right of gun own- ership for law-abiding peo- ple, and we’ve got to have a new measure of safety to prevent gun violence.” Wyden himself has intro- duced or co-sponsored a list of bills. Among the propos- als: Universal background checks for fi rearms pur- chasers, raising the age of possession from 18 to 21, restricting guns on cam- puses, banning assault weapons, and barring access to guns by terrorists, domes- tic abusers and others at risk of harming themselves or others. “All of those would make a real diff erence in reducing the risk of these mass shoot- ings, as well as tackling the reported increase of shoot- ing incidents in our home- town,” Wyden said. “We are not talking about something thousands of miles away.” Wyden discussed the issue at a town hall meeting in Keizer several days after the Feb. 14, 2018, shootings at Marjory Stoneman Doug- las High School in Park- land, Florida, that claimed Wallowa County Chieftain/File Photo U.S. Sen. Ron Wyden said it’s up to Republican colleagues in the U.S. Senate to show whether they are serious about federal fi rearms restrictions. 17 lives and wounded 17 others. The prospects for leg- islation are not high. The Senate has not taken up the issue since the failed votes in 2013. The Senate dead- locked 47-47 on May 26 on closing debate on a bill (HR 350) to improve mon- itoring, investigating and prosecuting domestic ter- rorism by the FBI, Justice Department and Depart- ment of Homeland Security. That vote was short of the 60 required to close debate, although Majority Leader Chuck Schumer of New York switched his vote to preserve the option of bring- ing it back. The House passed two bills in March 2021, but neither is likely to pass in the evenly divided Sen- ate. One bill (HR 8) would expand federal background checks on potential buy- ers to sales at gun shows and on the internet, not just those by licensed deal- ers. The other (HR 1446) would allow more time for federal law enforcement to conduct a check and close the so-called “Charleston loophole,” under which the shooter in a 2015 massacre obtained fi rearms although the check had not been com- pleted within the required three business days. After Uvalde: ‘Enough’ Wyden spoke in the after- math of the nation’s lat- est mass shootings. On May 14, 10 Black people died in a supermarket in Buff alo, at the hands of an 18-year-old man motivated by white supremacist ideol- ogy. Ten days later, 19 chil- dren and two adults died at the hands of an 18-year-old shooter — who also died — at Robb Elementary School in Uvalde, Texas. Wyden spoke on the same day that the National Rifl e Association opened its annual convention in Houston, a few hours from Uvalde, with former Presi- dent Donald Trump as one of the speakers. Wyden called it “a shameless gath- ering of death.” “Enough of our country being the only industrialized western nation that shrugs its shoulders at the mas- sacre of children,” Wyden said in his opening remarks to reporters. “Enough of the clichés and excuses. “Enough of letting those convicted of crimes hurting women and kids keep their guns. “What other message could there be besides ‘enough,’ when this shame- less gathering of death is being held only a few hours’ drive from this week’s school massacre?” “There is a long and ever-lengthening list of atrocities that Oregonians know all too well.” Wyden specifi ed the Ore- gon incidents: • Thurston High School, Springfi eld, 1998: Two parents and two students shot dead; 25 wounded. • Clackamas Town Cen- ter, 2012: Three deaths, including the shooter. • Reynolds High School, Troutdale, 2014: one stu- dent dead plus the shooter; one teacher wounded. • Umpqua Commu- nity College, Roseburg, 2015: Eight students and an instructor shot dead, plus the shooter; eight wounded. ‘Can’t put up a fence’ Wyden said Oregon has compiled a good record of state legislation in the past two decades. Voters extended a requirement for background checks to pur- chasers at gun shows in 2000, and lawmakers did so for most private trans- actions in 2015. A red-fl ag law in 2017 allows family members and law enforce- ment to seek court orders if people are deemed at risk of harming themselves or oth- ers; the orders last one year. Safe storage requirements passed in 2021, under a law allowing school, community college and university gov- erning boards to restrict fi re- arms on campuses. “But we can’t put up a fence around our state,” Wyden said. Though Wyden isn’t one of the senators involved in the latest negotiations, he said that as chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, he is preparing to advance legislation to improve men- tal health services with bipartisan support. One of those who testifi ed to Wyden’s committee earlier this year was a senior at La Pine High School, who also volunteers for a youth line — and who said there are not enough people to fi eld calls and off er help. For Wyden, the issue is personal. His older brother, Jeff , had schizophrenia and died in 2002 at age 51. His brother’s struggles are described in “Conquering Schizophrenia,” a book by Peter Wyden, their father, who died in 1998. But Wyden also said improved mental health ser- vices must go hand in hand with stricter regulations on fi rearms. “I just don’t want anybody to walk away with the argu- ment that (mental health) is somehow the entire solu- tion,” he said. “Most people with mental health issues are not involved in the kind of massacres we’ve seen.” Prepare for Power Outages & Save Money REQUEST A FREE QUOTE! ACT NOW TO RECEIVE A $300 SPECIAL OFFER!* (844) 989-2328 *Off er value when purchased at retail. Solar panels sold separately. Here for you! 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