First the good news....
Thanks to your efforts, the anti-gun bills below are defeated. There
is a potential for procedural moves to revive these bills, but the National Rifle Association will remain vigilant and will notify you if any future action is needed.
House Bill 1144 failed to pass out of the policy committee and Senate Bill 5232 failed to pass out of the fiscal committee by the legislative deadline. These bills would have denied citizens their Second Amendment rights unless they met a training mandate, imposed an arbitrary delay on prospective gun owners taking possession of their firearms, and created a registry of gun owners.
House Bill 1178 failed to pass out of the policy committee by the legislative deadline. It would have repealed Washington’s preemption statute and revoked the Legislature’s own authority to be the primary authority regulating firearms. This would have allowed localities to pass their own anti-gun ordinances and create a confusing patchwork of gun laws.
Now the not-so-good news.... & why we must act before March 8th.
Three major anti-gun bills still remain active in the Legislature, while the others are likely defeated for the session.
Ownership restrictions
House Bill 1143 - Permit-to-Purchase, Mandatory Training, 10-day Waiting Period, Indefinite Transfer Delays, & Government Registry
HB 1143 denies
law-abiding citizens their Second Amendment right to acquire firearms
unless they obtain a government-issued permit. The permit is only valid
for five years and to obtain the permit, the state requires completion
of official, sanctioned firearms classroom and live fire training every
five years. The live fire training will make it impractical, if not
impossible for first-time firearm owners to complete the necessary
training. It also imposes an arbitrary ten-day delay on prospective gun
owners taking possession of their firearms and makes this delay longer
or indefinite if the state fails to complete background check during
that time. The state police will also maintain a database (registry) of
gun owners and their personal data.
On February 23rd, the House Appropriations Committee passed House Bill 1143, with a “null and void” amendment requiring that funding must be appropriated in the budget, or the bill will fail. Please contact your state representatives and ask them to OPPOSE HB 1143.
Semi-Automatic firearms ban:
House Bill 1240, a so-called “assault weapons ban,” is a comprehensive ban on the future transferring, importing, and manufacturing of many semi-automatic firearms that law-abiding citizens commonly-own for self-defense, competition, and recreation. It bans enumerated firearm models on a list, that include shotguns, handguns and rifles. The ban includes semi-automatic rifles with an overall length of less than 30 inches, and any firearms with one or more proscribed features that exist on modern designs for making firearms more user-friendly, such as telescoping stocks meant to adjust the length of pull for users of different statures or wearing different clothing, muzzle brakes meant to reduce recoil, grips conducive to the natural angles of human wrists, and suppressors for hearing protection. In addition, it also bans spare parts and “combination[s] of parts” that can be used to assemble banned firearms, but on their own are simply pieces of plastic or metal.
On January 30th, the House Civil Rights and Judiciary Committee passed House Bill 1240. Its companion, Senate Bill 5265, failed to pass out of a policy committee by the legislative deadline and is dead for the session. HB 1240 can only proceed if the full House passes it by March 8th. Please contact your state representatives and ask them to OPPOSE HB 1240.
Firearm industry liability for criminal acts:
Senate Bill 5078 aims to undermine the Protection of Lawful Commerce in Arms Act (PLCAA) and
subject licensed firearm manufacturers and sellers to frivolous
lawsuits brought to recover damages for the criminal misuse of their
products. Protecting the firearms industry, like other lawful
industries, is necessary because our legal system generally does not
punish anyone for the criminal actions of others. This bill simply seeks
to sue the firearms industry out of existence in the state of
Washington. The firearms industry supplies thousands of jobs in
Washington and the excise tax on the sale and purchase of firearms,
ammunition, and accessories produces millions of dollars for
conservation in our state from Pittman-Robertson funds. This bill will
eliminate thousands of jobs and deprive the state of millions of dollars
annually. Without the firearms industry, Washingtonians will not have
access to firearms and ammunition and the fundamental right to keep and
bear arms.
On February 24th, the Senate Ways and Means Committee passed Senate Bill 5078,
after amending the bill to remove the private right of action, but
still allowing the Attorney General to bring these frivolous and flawed
lawsuits. House Bill 1130,
the House companion, is dead after failing to pass out of a policy
committee by the legislative deadline. SB 5078 is currently in the
Senate Rules Committee and can only proceed if the full Senate passes it
by March 8th. Please contact your state senator and ask them to OPPOSE SB 5078.
The National Rifle Association has a link you can click on to contact all your district lawmakers in order to ask them to OPPOSE these bills.
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