Government responds to the threats that are expected.

In California, that means building codes anticipate earthquakes. In Florida, emergency management plans for hurricanes.

And now, Pennsylvania must prepare for political violence.

State police are creating a unit to address threats against elected officials. The move comes after the arrest of Lebanon County resident Adam Berryhill, who is accused of making violent threats against Democratic lawmakers, including a purported “hit list” of Pennsylvania legislators.

Berryhill is not an anomaly. He is part of a growing pattern of political threats in Pennsylvania and across the country.

There was the arson attack on the governor’s residence last year. U.S. Rep. Chris Deluzio had bomb threats directed at his offices. In 2024, a shooting at a political rally injured then-presidential candidate Donald Trump and killed local firefighter Corey Comperatore. Two other men were hospitalized.

It is hard to predict and plan for isolated incidents. But creating a process that not only identifies threats but also coordinates a response makes sense.

That breakdown in communication is the kind of thing specialized units are designed to address.

Police departments and government agencies routinely develop expertise around recurring dangers. There are detectives focused on homicide, narcotics investigators trained to track drug trafficking and units dedicated to financial crimes or child exploitation. Those crimes are different. The way information is gathered, analyzed and communicated is different, too.

Political violence increasingly demands the same focused attention.

Much like the Sept. 11, 2001, terrorist attacks exposed communication and coordination gaps among federal agencies, the arrest of Berryhill revealed weaknesses in how threat information moves through Pennsylvania’s system.

While state police quickly identified the threat and moved the investigation forward, some of the targeted legislators did not learn they were on the list until information became public days later.

The failure was not in recognizing the danger. It was in ensuring information moved effectively after the danger was identified.

Creating a new unit does not mean Pennsylvania is surrendering to the idea threats against elected officials are normal. It means acknowledging they are real. Threats spread quickly online. They can target multiple people across jurisdictions and involve law enforcement, legislative leadership and intelligence investigators all at once.

A coordinated response is not just about making arrests. It is about making sure the right people have the right information at the right time.

That matters for the elected officials involved, but it also matters for the public. While an elected official might be the target, the fallout from violence is often broader.

The existence of a political violence threat unit is unsettling because it reflects a troubling reality. But ignoring that reality would be worse.