Today, U.S. Rep. Ed Perlmutter
along with members of the House Gun Violence
Prevention Task Force released their comprehensive set of policy principles designed to reduce gun violence while respecting
the 2nd Amendment Rights of law-abiding Americans. Perlmutter is
a Vice-Chair of the Gun Violence Prevention Task Force.
Perlmutter
stated, "I respect and value the Second Amendment and value the liberty
and rights of hunters, sportsmen and personal defense gun owners, and they have
nothing to fear in the principles announced today. My constituents, like most
Americans, have told me they support these kinds of sensible solutions.
We cannot wait another day, week or month. The time for action is now to
make gun violence less easy, less frequent and less deadly to keep our kids and
communities safe."
“As a
hunter and gun owner I believe we should protect a law-abiding individuals’ 2nd
Amendment right to own firearms. As a father and grandfather I also believe
that we have a responsibility to make our schools, streets and communities
safe. This comprehensive set of policy principles accomplishes both those goals
and Congress should act on them without delay. Moving forward I will use these
recommendations to develop and influence legislation in both the House and
Senate and work to get legislation based on these principles signed into law,” said Gun Violence Prevention Task Force Chairman Mike Thompson.
For
nearly two months, the Gun Violence Prevention Task Force, under the leadership
of Chairman Mike Thompson, met with people on both sides of the aisle and all
sides of the issue to develop a comprehensive set of policy principles that
respect the 2nd Amendment and will make our schools, neighborhoods,
and communities safer.
The task
force met with and solicited input from victims of gun violence and gun safety
advocates; gun owners, hunters, and outdoor sportsmen; federal, state, and
local law enforcement; educators and community workers; mental health experts
and physicians; representatives of the motion picture, television, music, and
video game industries; leaders in our faith communities; and representatives of
gun manufacturers and retailers, as well as cabinet secretaries and the Vice
President of the United States. The task force also met with Members of
Congress from all sides of the issue, and held hearings in Washington, DC to
consider ways to address this issue.
The Gun
Violence Prevention Task Force urges Congress to:
-
Support the 2nd
Amendment rights of law-abiding Americans. The United States Supreme Court affirmed
individuals’ 2nd rights to firearms in District of Columbia v. Heller
(2008). However, the Supreme Court also held that “the right secured by
the Second Amendment is not unlimited,” Within the
limits described by Heller, the federal government has the
responsibility to take appropriate steps to protect our citizens from gun
violence.
-
Support citizens’ rights to possess
firearms for hunting, shooting sports, defense, and other lawful and legitimate
purposes: In the
United States, there is a long tradition of hunting and recreational shooting,
and firearms are often passed down within families from generation to
generation. Policies passed by Congress should respect this.
-
Reinstate and strengthen a
prospective federal ban on assault weapons: These weapons are designed to fire a large number
of rounds in a short period of time. They constitute a lethal threat to law
enforcement and other first responders.
-
Reinstate a prospective federal
ban on assault magazines:
These magazines hold more than ten rounds and allow a shooter to inflict mass
damage in a short period of time without reloading. Banning them will save
lives.
-
Require a background check for every gun sale, while
respecting reasonable
exceptions for cases such as gifts
between family members and temporary loans for sporting purposes: It is estimated that four out of ten gun
buyers do not go through a background check when purchasing a firearm because
federal law only requires these checks when someone buys a gun from a federally
licensed dealer. That would be like allowing four out of ten people to choose if
they’d go through airport security. This loophole allows felons, domestic
abusers, and those prohibited because of mental illness to easily bypass the
criminal background check system and buy firearms at gun shows, through private sellers, over the internet or out of the trunks of cars.
-
Strengthen the National Instant
Criminal Background Check System (NICS) database: Immediate action is needed to
ensure the information in the NICS database is up to date. Many federal and
state agencies remain deficient in transferring important records to the
database. Without the information, the background checks aren’t complete. This
needs to change.
-
Prosecute those prohibited buyers
who attempt to purchase firearms and others who violate federal firearm laws: Federal law bars nine
categories of people—including felons and those prohibited because of mental
illness —from buying guns. But when prohibited persons attempt to buy guns,
they are hardly ever prosecuted. More can and must be done to make these
investigations and prosecutions a priority.
-
Pass legislation aimed
specifically at cracking down on illegal gun trafficking and straw-purchasing: Straw-purchasing is when a
prohibited buyer has someone with no criminal history walk into a gun store,
pass a background check and purchase a gun with the purpose of giving it to the
prohibited buyer. This puts guns in the hands of people who are
prohibited from having them. Congress should pass a law that will put an end to
this practice.
-
Restore funding for public safety
and law enforcement initiatives aimed at reducing gun violence: Congress should fund law
enforcement’s efforts to reduce gun violence, while supporting federal research
into causes of gun violence. Put simply, there is no reason the Centers
for Disease Control (CDC) or the National Institute of Health (NIH) should be
inhibited from researching the causes of gun violence. And there is no reason
for the restrictions federal law places on our law enforcement officers’
ability to track and combat the spread of illegal guns.
-
Support initiatives that prevent problems before they
start: Local
communities should have assistance in applying evidence-based prevention and
early intervention strategies that are designed
to prevent the problems that lead to gun violence before those problems start.
-
Close the holes in our
mental-health system and make sure that care is available for those who need
it: Congress
must improve prevention, early intervention, and treatment of mental illness
while working to eliminate the stigma associated with mental illness. Access to
mental health services should be improved, the shortage of mental health
professionals should be addressed, and funding should be made available for those
programs that have proven to be effective.
-
Help our communities get unwanted
and illegal guns out of the hands of those who don’t want them or shouldn’t
have them: Congress
should help support and develop local programs that get unwanted guns off our streets.
And Congress should work with states to develop programs that get guns out of
the hands of those convicted of certain crimes or those prohibited because of
mental illness.
-
Support
responsible gun ownership: Congress should support safety
training, research aimed at developing new gun safety technologies and the safe
storage of firearms.
-
Take
steps to enhance school safety. Congress
must help all schools implement evidence-based strategies that support safe
learning environments tailored to the unique needs of students and local
communities. And Congress must work with all schools to develop emergency
response plans.
-
Address
our culture’s glorification of violence seen and heard though our movie
screens, television shows, music and video games: Congress should fund scientific
research on the relationship between popular culture and gun violence, while
ensuring that parents have access to the information they need to make informed
decisions about what their families watch, listen to, and play.
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