New Jersey Town Adopts Resolution To Provide Financial Relief To Concealed Carry Holders

Second Amendment Gun Permission Slip twitter.com/LilSouthernSass/status/1539992520356237312/photo/1

BELLEVUE, WA – The Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms commends Englishtown. New Jersey for adopting a resolution that will provide financial relief to concealed carry holders. The action comes after CCRKBA sent a letter in support  of the resolution to the mayor and borough council.

Post-Buren, New Jersey enacted a law that raised the permitting fee for a permit to carry to $200. The $200 permit is only good for two years, and the cost to carry is an example of the “exorbitant fees” the Supreme Court said would be impermissible even under a “shall-issue” permitting system. Of that fee, $150 is appropriated to the individual municipality an applicant lives in. Englishtown resolved that a rebate program shall be instituted, refunding $150 of the money collected back to applicants. The remaining $50 goes to the State of New Jersey.

The Committee addressed the Mayor and council of Englishtown on Tuesday via a letter–which can be read here–when news about the resolution began circulating. “Seeing this body move within their powers to create a rebate vehicle for permit to carry applicants is a show of true leadership,” CCRKBA Chairman Alan Gottlieb said in his letter. Gottlieb also cited the unconstitutional nature of the fee when he addressed the council.

During comments Wednesday evening, Englishtown Mayor Daniel Francisco said that the resolution “is important” and that he’s there “to try to protect people’s rights.” Later on Francisco explicitly stated when drawing an analogue, “I think if Englishtown passed the law that said every time you came to tell me your opinion about something, I charged you $150 and if you didn’t pay that fee, you would not be allowed to speak before us, that would be the most unconstitutional and abusive policy I could possibly imagine.”

“Moves like this from courageous municipalities in a state as hostile to the Second Amendment as New Jersey are very commendable,” CCRKBA Chairman Alan Gottlieb said. “Mayor Daniel Francisco and his council brought forward a meaningful measure that will help the economically disadvantaged gain access to the most effective life-saving tool for self-defense; the ability to bear arms in public.

“Governor Phil Murphy and the equally misguided legislature in the Garden State may have forced these fees upon permit to carry applicants, but Trenton can’t tell municipalities what they can and cannot do with the funds they collect. In refunding these monies back to the people, it’s a clear message about the unconstitutional nature of the law–A law that Murphy enacted in December of 2022 because Bruen upended the law. The Englishtown mayor had the fortitude to put the unconstitutionality of these fees on the record, calling Trenton out on their hatred towards gun owners and the Second Amendment.”

The resolution passed by Englishtown, N.J. is good governance, as well as a roadmap for other municipalities to copy. The Committee eagerly waits to see what other jurisdictions will follow suit. CCRKBA’s support of this measure and action from their membership shows that grassroots activism is a powerful tool.

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Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms

With more than 650,000 members and supporters nationwide, the Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms (www.ccrkba.org) is one of the nation’s premier gun rights organizations. As a non-profit organization, the Citizens Committee is dedicated to preserving firearms freedoms through active lobbying of elected officials and facilitating grass-roots organization of gun rights activists in local communities throughout the United States.

Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms

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rbdjr

Question? So does every single Municipality need to take the state to court? Why is this not statewide?
The $$ for every court trial vs the state is mind-boggling.
I personoly have no idea how the process works

RichDD

Wow. Never thought I’d see anything like this from NJ.

Boz

My permit was issued in 1791.

Cynical

They can try to obfuscate it as much as they want. But the fact is I don’t need a permit when I have a right.

Akai

Unless We The People are willing to fight for that ratification, it will get lost due to morons in DC.

Wass

It should be noted, Englishtown experienced the closure, about twenty years ago, by anti-gun elements, of an outstanding outdoor shooting range (“Winchester” range on Gertler Rd). It’s taken till recently for a replacement (however, indoor) to materialize.
New Jersey 2A supporters have their work cut out for them, no matter the outcome of the coming gubernatorial race.