©2011 Galesburg Broadcasting Co.
| Locking Up Guns At Home |
(IRN)-A measure that would have stripped local governments from regulating how gun owners store their weapons has failed in the Illinois House.
State law requires gun owners to keep their firearms either locked up, or stripped down and fashioned with a device so that the gun is inoperable. The law's intent is to protect children from gun related accidents. But local governments can pass ordinances that fine tune the gun storage regulation and apply it to their residents.
State Representative Wayne Rosenthal (R-Morrisonville) sponsored the bill that would have created a blanket gun storage law, preventing local governments from having individual laws.
"It's just another case of where we're trying to make the laws concerning guns and gun storage and the ownership of guns consistent across the state, so we don't have a patchwork of laws statewide where individuals don't know, going from one municipality to another, what the laws are that govern them," said Rosenthal.
Home rule units, or larger communities in Illinois like Chicago, Urbana and East St. Louis, would also have been subject to the law.
Because it would have pre-empted home rule units, Rosenthal's bill (HB2045) needed 71 votes to pass. It only got 61, and of the 48 "no" votes, 26 were from the city of Chicago. Rosenthal said he doesn't think his bill's failure is any indication of how the Illinois House will vote on another controversial gun bill coming up, concealed carry.
State Representative Brandon Phelps is sponsoring a bill (HB148) that would allow law abiding citizens to carry concealed weapons. Phelps agrees with Rosenthal and says he's counted the votes for the concealed carry bill.
"We're three to four votes short right now," said Phelps, who would also need 71 votes for concealed carry to pass.
"But, someone asked us too, someone said, 'well why don't you exempt Cook County and that way you don't need 71, you need 60 (votes)?'. And we've talked about that with the NRA and that's their decision. They think with the Supreme Court cases, the two on their side, they don't want to leave anybody out. It's all or none in their eyes, so I'm just going along with them."
Phelps says the biggest opponents of the bill are from Chicago.
"There is definitely a big push from the city of Chicago right now trying to beat this…a huge push. They know it's close, and they know this is the closest we've ever had in the history of Illinois of passing this."
(Source: Illinois Radio Network) |
|
| 04 07 11 by Newsroom |
Click here for the WGIL News Archive
Click here for national news
The following provision applies to all visitors (which shall include persons and representatives of legal entities, whether such representatives are persons or digital engines of a kind that crawls, indexes, scrapes, copies, stores or transmits digital content). By accessing this Web site or digital service, you specifically acknowledge and agree that: (i) Associated Press text, photo, graphic, audio and/or video material shall not be published, broadcast, rewritten for broadcast or publication or redistributed directly or indirectly in any medium; (ii) No Associated Press materials nor any portion thereof may be stored in a computer except for personal and non-commercial use; (iii) The Associated Press will not be held liable for any delays, inaccuracies, errors or omissions therefrom or in the transmission or delivery of all or any part thereof or for any damages arising from any of the foregoing; (iv) The Associated Press is an intended third party beneficiary of these terms and conditions and it may exercise all rights and remedies available to it; and (v) The Associated Press reserves the right to audit possible unauthorized commercial use of AP materials or any portion thereof at any time.