VCDL Gun Bill Vote Tomorrow 1/26

The #1 community for Gun Owners of the Northeast

Member Benefits:

  • No ad networks!
  • Discuss all aspects of firearm ownership
  • Discuss anti-gun legislation
  • Buy, sell, and trade in the classified section
  • Chat with Local gun shops, ranges, trainers & other businesses
  • Discover free outdoor shooting areas
  • View up to date on firearm-related events
  • Share photos & video with other members
  • ...and so much more!
  • Bob A

    όυ φροντισ
    MDS Supporter
    Patriot Picket
    Nov 11, 2009
    31,000
    From the email:




    Tomorrow, Wednesday, January 26, 2022 in the afternoon, the Senate Judiciary committee is meeting to consider eight gun-bills – five that VCDL strongly supports (repealing local gun-control and One Handgun a Month laws, Constitutional Carry, and CHP exemptions from Universal Background Checks and local gun-control), and three that VCDL strongly opposes.

    Click here to send an email to your senator to support the five pro-gun bills: https://oneclickpolitics.global.ssl.fastly.net/promo/3xc


    Click here to send another email to your senator to oppose the other bills: https://oneclickpolitics.global.ssl.fastly.net/promo/3xg



    If you can attend the committee hearing, it starts half hour after the Senate adjourns from the Floor. That could be anytime from 2pm onward, but possibly closer to 3pm. The meeting is in Senate Room A on the ground floor. Someone will be handing out GSL stickers. You can speak on the bills if you wish, or you can stand in support (or opposition) when called upon to do so. Just having a lot of people wearing GSL stickers in the audience is helpful.

    Here is more detailed information on the bills being heard:



    Bills VCDL Strongly SUPPORTS

    SB 74, Senator Chase, repeals the authority for localities to have an ordinance banning firearms in local government buildings, parks, recreation and community centers, and at events that are permitted, or should have been permitted. While only 16 out of 194 localities have such an ordinance, it still creates a web of laws that can trip up gun owners as they move around in the Commonwealth. No other civil right varies based on location. Because of the seriousness of gun-law penalties, gun laws should be uniform across the Commonwealth, as they had been from 2004 to 2020. None of the 16 localities could show a need for such an ordinance, but many claimed it would lower crime and make their locality safer. In reality, violent crime is up over 20%. In Alexandria, crime committed using a firearm skyrocketed 40% starting the very month that their ordinance went into effect and has stayed up. Richmond’s violent crime is now back to the highs of decades ago. Disarming citizens in parks, which cannot be secured, puts citizens at unnecessary risk. The ban on guns at permitted, or should have been permitted, events is vague as to exactly what locations “open to the public” are included. Richmond has abused that part of the law by leaving signs up permanently on some streets, giving citizens the impossible task of determining if there is an event in the area that is permitted, or worse, should have been permitted. The 2020 change to the firearm preemption law was a classic example of fixing something that wasn’t broken, and we need to restore the law as it was in 2019.

    SB 330, Senator Reeves, “Constitutional Carry” bill, allows someone without a concealed handgun permit, but who would qualify for one, to carry a concealed handgun anywhere they could lawfully open carry a handgun. Twenty-one states now have Constitutional Carry, none have repealed it, and more states are expected to follow suit this year. Neighboring Kentucky, Tennessee and West Virginia are Constitutional Carry states.

    SB 364, Senator Reeves, repeals Virginia’s One Handgun a Month arbitrary gun-rationing scheme. Federal law already requires gun dealers to report to the BATFE any repeated handgun-sales made to the same individual during any five-day period.

    SB 644, Senator Hackworth, exempts CHP holders from Universal Background Checks.

    SB 763, Senator Obenshain, exempts concealed handgun permit holders from local gun-control ordinances.



    Bills VCDL Strongly OPPOSES

    SB 61, Senator Hackworth, exempts certain retired and active government employees from gun laws that better-trained concealed handgun permit holders are not exempted from. The bill exempts retired or active Commonwealth Attorneys, Assistant Commonwealth Attorneys, and judges or justices of the Commonwealth from: local-government gun prohibitions, the Capitol Square and state agency gun prohibition (rest stops, General Assembly Building, DMV, ABC, etc.), the prohibition against loaded rifles or shotguns in a vehicle, guns in non-secure areas of airport terminals, on school property, and the prohibition against carry within 40 feet of a polling place. Retired and active Commonwealth Attorneys, judges, and justices have NO requirement for training, while concealed handgun permit holders DO have training. CHP holders have an exemplary record of carrying and using guns in a responsible and legal manner. There is no valid reason that CHP holders should not be allowed to carry in the same places and with the same exemptions as retired and active Commonwealth Attorneys, Assistant Commonwealth Attorneys, judges, and justices. SB 61 sets up a caste system with an entitled class of princelings with special privileges not afforded to “commoners.” VCDL does support the LEOSA training provision in the bill.

    SB 310, Senator Ebbin, makes the possession, transfer, sale, or manufacture of a homemade gun a crime, unless at some point federal law requires a frame to be serialized and a federal firearms importer or a federal firearms manufacturer has serialized the frame. This bill would make existing homemade guns illegal and would make 80% receivers illegal, turning innocent citizens into criminals overnight, with no compensation for the loss of their previously legal gun or 80% frame. Like the proverbial “bull in a china shop,” this bill is tinkering with extremely complicated gun laws.

    SB 487, Senator McClellan, creates a Virginia Center for Firearm Violence Intervention and Prevention. The sole focus in firearms and the description of the proposed center make it clear this is political and not about finding solutions. Violence is violence. The violent person is the problem, not whatever tool that is used.
     

    Users who are viewing this thread

    Latest posts

    Forum statistics

    Threads
    275,603
    Messages
    7,288,049
    Members
    33,487
    Latest member
    Mikeymike88

    Latest threads

    Top Bottom