The following editorial originally appeared in The Seattle Times:
When campus officials at Michigan State University began tweeting “Run, Hide, Fight” as guidance to students for how to handle a gunman actively shooting on campus, they were essentially saying: Sorry, we are out of ideas.
This advice was not unique to Michigan, of course. Formulated by the Department of Homeland Security, it is widely dispersed. In Washington, even the tiny Shelton School District posts videos advocating the approach.
It may be practical in the moment. But “Run, Hide, Fight” is not an adequate response. It is a concession that the feds, at least, have nothing more concrete to offer on public safety.
Washington state gun policy, however, has been moving in a more constructive direction for nearly a decade. Since 2014, voter initiatives have pushed the Legislature to close background-check loopholes, institute red-flag laws and prohibit the sale of assault rifles to anyone under 21.
This session, gun-responsibility advocates believe they are on the verge of bold new action that would hold the firearms industry accountable for helping to curb gun violence.
Senate Bill 5078, known as the “Justice for Victims of Gun Violence” law, stakes out new territory. It would allow the state attorney general and private citizens to sue gun manufacturers, dealers or marketers for marketing guns to minors or knowingly selling to a “straw purchaser” who hands off firearms to people prohibited from possessing them.
While federal legislation shields the gun industry from civil suits in federal court, states can pass their own laws holding the industry accountable. Both New York and Connecticut have already done so. Last year, the families of nine victims in the Sandy Hook school shooting settled a lawsuit for $73 million against Remington, the maker of the AR-15-style rifle used in that massacre.
Disappointingly, House Bill 1240, which seeks to restrict the sale of assault weapons, has been significantly weakened from its original version with a new clause that permits dealers and manufacturers to ship guns to out-of-state buyers. That allows for the possibility that someone planning an attack in Washington could receive their assault rifle in Idaho and simply step over the state line to use it. While the gun lobby may object, this clause should be struck.
No law can guarantee against a massacre. But those moving through the Legislature would hold the industry accountable for the harm done with its products as never before, similar to the ways civil suits forced Big Pharma to answer for its role in the opioid crisis.
With ever more citizens shattered by gun violence, and a majority of legislators endorsing new muscle in combating it, Washington is poised to model a major culture shift, rejecting the belief that there are no answers.