HomeDirectorySubmit NewsSubscriptionsAbout UsAdvertiseRecent Posts

 
People like this. Be the first of your friends.

Congress Packs Firearms Riders in Minibus

Monday, December 19th, 2011 at 11:32 AM

By Jeff Knox

Gift From Congress

Congress Packs Firearms Riders in Minibus

FirearmsCoalition.org

FirearmsCoalition.org

Manassas, VA --(Ammoland.com)- Rather than pass a large, all-encompassing omnibus appropriations bill for the new fiscal year – which began on October 1 – Congress narrowed the scope of their first funding bill to cover only certain essential services and agencies in what they dubbed a “minibus” appropriations bill.

Even so, the measure, which was finally passed in mid November and signed by the President on November 18, was massive and complex.

Along with funding government agencies and specific programs, the Congress included numerous limitations on how the money can and cannot be spent, including over a dozen riders pertaining to firearms issues.

Most were directly related to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms, and Explosives (ATF), while others were aimed at the Justice Department and other agencies which deal with firearms law enforcement, record keeping, import, and export, etc. Such instructions, known as riders, are nothing new, in fact, most of the ATF provisions have been included in appropriations bills for years, some for decades.

But this year’s unique “minibus” has some new tricks.

A permanent prohibition against the establishment of any sort of federal registration system of firearms and firearm owners, which has been included in appropriations bills since 1979, is among the more significant features of this bill. That provision was originally promulgated under the guidance of my father, Neal Knox, when he was Executive Director of NRA-ILA, the NRA’s lobbying division, and has been included in appropriations bill each year since. Dad would be pleased to see this protection finally made permanent.

Other provisions that attained permanent status in this bill include a prohibition against the computerization of records from out-of-business firearms dealers, a requirement that any identifying information obtained through the National Instant Background Check System (NICS) be destroyed within 24-hours of a transfer being approved, and restrictions on the release of firearms trace data.

An important new provision in this appropriation forbids the government from blocking the importation of shotguns based on a determination that they are not “suitable for sporting purposes,” if those shotguns were deemed suitable for importation in 2011. This was in response to last year’s “study” from the ATF suggesting that they were moving to use the “sporting purpose” clause of the Gun Control Act (GCA) to block importation of a variety of tactical-style shotguns which have been gaining popularity for home defense and action-shooting competition. Prices for these shotguns skyrocketed in the wake of the ATF “study” from the $300 – $400 range to the $1200 – $1300 range. The fact that this importability assurance is not permanent, requiring reauthorization every year, means that these shotguns should be more readily available, but their prices are likely to remain inflated based on fears of future import bans.

However, not all of the firearms-related riders in this minibus are gun-friendly. There is a provision, which has been included in appropriations since 1992, to prohibit the expenditure of any money on processing requests for restoration of firearms rights. This provision is particularly onerous since Congress specifically made provisions for such restoration of rights for people ATF determines are not a threat to society. The repeated inclusion of this prohibition points up the “sausage-making” process of Congress as various politicians play give-and-take with our rights.

A particularly unusual rider forbids the transfer of duties and responsibilities from ATF to any other federal agency. The prime motivator of this restriction is fear that the administration could shift certain responsibilities from ATF to some other entity and thereby side-step restrictions that specifically name ATF. There is also concern that shifting responsibility for firearms law enforcement to the U.S. Marshals or the FBI could make it more difficult to observe and influence those activities. With all of the criticism rights groups level at ATF, most recognize that the problems with ATF are primarily the fault of poorly written laws, not necessarily flaws within the agency or its personnel.

Other provisions protect definitions and importability of “Curios and Relics” as regulators try to resist including more modern-style guns that cross the 50-year eligibility mark for that classification. Again though, the fact that these protections come in the form of annual funding restrictions means that they can’t truly stabilize markets, prices, and procedures.

In the end, the firearms riders in the minibus represent a net gain for gun owners, but the whole process highlights serious flaws in current laws and regulations as well as the messiness of our legislative process. Wading through the massive appropriations bill and its many riders also offers a glimpse at just how pervasive and expensive federal government has become.

Clearly the protections and limitations included in the US Constitution are of little concern to those writing our laws and spending our money.

Copyright © 2011 Neal Knox Associates – The most trusted name in the rights movement.

About:
The Firearms Coalition is a loose-knit coalition of individual Second Amendment activists, clubs and civil rights organizations. Founded by Neal Knox in 1984, the organization provides support to grassroots activists in the form of education, analysis of current issues, and with a historical perspective of the gun rights movement. The Firearms Coalition is a project of Neal Knox Associates, Manassas, VA. Visit: www.FirearmsCoalition.org

Tags: , , , ,
 Email   Print     
 
People like this. Be the first of your friends.

House Passes Veterans Second Amendment Protection Act

Thursday, October 13th, 2011 at 11:51 AM

House Passes Veterans Second Amendment Protection Act
Time to start Lobbying Your Senators Hard!

FirearmsCoalition.org

FirearmsCoalition.org

Manassas, VA --(Ammoland.com)- This important legislation has been languishing in both houses of Congress for the past several years in spite of bi-partisan efforts to get it moving.

The Senate version of the bill, sponsored by Sen. Richard Burr (R-NC), was passed out of the Judiciary Committee in 2009 and placed on the Senate Calendar under General Orders where it remained awaiting action from self-avowed Second Amendment supporter, Senate Majority Leader Harry Reid (D-NV).

Reid allowed the bill to die with the close of the 111th Congress and it was not reintroduced in the Senate in the 112th Congress.

Now that a version of the legislation has passed out of the House, the pressure needs to be on for Senators to sign off on it and send it to the President.

Representative Denny Rehberg (R-MT) successfully amended the language from his bill, H.R.1898, to a broader veterans benefits bill, H.R.2349, which then passed the House on Tuesday, October 11.

The broader bill now goes to the Senate for consideration where shenanigans could strip out or seriously undermine the impact of the Rehberg language.

Contact your Senator – especially Democrats who have gotten elected by claiming to support the Second Amendment - and urge them to vote for passage of H.R.2349 with the Veterans’ Second Amendment Protection language intact.

The Veterans’ Second Amendment Protection Act was introduced in response to a Veterans Administration policy of submitting names of veterans to the FBI for inclusion in the NICS firearms purchaser background check database. The VA has been submitting the names of veterans who have a fiduciary appointed to manage their financial affairs as “mental defectives” who are then permanently prohibited from possessing or having access to firearms and/or ammunition. It is not uncommon for a veteran with minor memory issues or problems such as compulsive buying or gambling to have themselves declared mentally incompetent to manage their own affairs and turn over control of their financial affairs to a spouse or relative to manage for them. Even if such an arrangement and diagnoses is temporary – such as in the case of a severely wounded veteran undergoing long-term rehabilitation or comatose patients – once the name is submitted to NICS, it is very difficult for them to ever regain right to arms.

The Veterans’ Second Amendment Protection Act specifies that only veterans who have been adjudicated to be a danger to themselves or others are to be submitted for inclusion in the NICS database. This simple adjustment could restore firearms rights to as many as 100,000 veterans who have had their names unreasonably submitted to NICS.
This important reform is long overdue and this is the closest we’ve ever come to getting it signed into law.

Your Immediate Action is Required!

Contact both of your senators AND Senate Majority Leader Reid.
Tell them that you want H.R.2349 passed with the Veterans’ Second Amendment Protection Act language retained intact. Do it Today and then do it again every few days until the bill is passed and signed by the President.

Also, please forward this Alert to every veteran and gun owner you know and re-post it on every veteran or firearms related forum, blog, and website you can find.

Our veterans deserve your support on this and the support of your senators.

For reference, here is a list of the 17 Republicans and 1 Democrat who cosponsored the Senate version of this bill in 2009:

Name [Party-ST] – Date Cosponsored

  • Sen Burr, Richard [R-NC] – Prime Sponsor
  • Sen Brownback, Sam [R-KS] – 9/29/2009
  • Sen Coburn, Tom [R-OK] – 3/23/2009
  • Sen Cochran, Thad [R-MS] – 3/23/2009
  • Sen Crapo, Mike [R-ID] – 3/23/2009
  • Sen DeMint, Jim [R-SC] – 3/23/2009
  • Sen Ensign, John [R-NV] – 3/23/2009
  • Sen Enzi, Michael B. [R-WY] – 3/23/2009
  • Sen Graham, Lindsey [R-SC] – 3/23/2009
  • Sen Grassley, Chuck [R-IA] – 3/23/2009
  • Sen Inhofe, James M. [R-OK] – 3/23/2009
  • Sen Murkowski, Lisa [R-AK] – 3/23/2009
  • Sen Risch, James E. [R-ID] – 8/6/2009
  • Sen Roberts, Pat [R-KS] – 3/23/2009
  • Sen Sessions, Jeff [R-AL] – 5/10/2010
  • Sen Thune, John [R-SD] – 3/23/2009
  • Sen Vitter, David [R-LA] – 3/23/2009
  • Sen Wicker, Roger F. [R-MS] – 3/23/2009
  • Sen Webb, Jim [D-VA] – 3/23/2009

About:
The Firearms Coalition is a loose-knit coalition of individual Second Amendment activists, clubs and civil rights organizations. Founded by Neal Knox in 1984, the organization provides support to grassroots activists in the form of education, analysis of current issues, and with a historical perspective of the gun rights movement. The Firearms Coalition is a project of Neal Knox Associates, Manassas, VA. Visit: www.FirearmsCoalition.org

Tags: , , , , ,
 Email   Print     
  1. Login with Facebook:
    Log In
    Powered by Sociable!
  2. Facebook Activity