Chattanooga Times Free Press

Republican­s vote to pare penalties for unlicensed handgun carriers

- BY ANDY SHER NASHVILLE BUREAU

NASHVILLE — The Tennessee House voted Monday to reduce first-offense penalties for carrying a handgun without a state-issued permit, jamming the controvers­ial measure through on a 72-20 vote despite criticisms from Democrats and concerns from the Haslam administra­tion, as well as some law enforcemen­t officials and others.

Rep. Bo Mitchell, D-Nashville, criticized the measure, saying police “use this as a tool to get a lot of guns off the streets that will later be used in crimes” and blasted as “pathetic” Republican­s moving the bill as the nation continues to mourn the fatal shooting of 17 students and faculty at a Parkland, Fla., high school.

“In today’s society, where we are looking for society to make children safer, this bill is setting a poor example,” Mitchell charged.

But Majority Leader Glen Casada, R-Franklin, argued the nation has a “heart problem, not a gun problem.”

Current law makes it a Class C misdemeano­r to carry a handgun without a permit, which requires a criminal background check and some training. It also provides up to 30 days in jail.

The bill, sponsored by Rep. Micah Van Huss, R-Gray, cuts the fine on first offense to $250 and eliminates the jail penalty, the latter is evidently rarely used.

Van Huss, a Marine sniper in the Iraq war, defended the legislatio­n, saying there have been cases where citizens with guns have stopped attacks. Van Huss cited as an example last September’s assault by a gunman on a church in Nashville’s Antioch community which left one churchgoer dead and wounded seven others.

Van Huss’ bill also prohibits police from seizing an unlicensed handgun carrier on first offense. But they added an amendment sponsored by Rep. Bill Dunn, R-Knoxville, that allows police to take the ammunition from the weapon.

In other action Monday night: › Tennessee schools will be required to display the national motto “In God We Trust” under legislatio­n that cleared the Senate. Sponsored by Sen. Paul Bailey, R-Sparta, the House companion bill is scheduled to be considered today in the Education Administra­tion and Planning Committee.

Dubbed the “National Motto in the Classroom Act,” the legislatio­n requires each school to display “In God We Trust” in a “prominent location” where students are likely to see it. That includes a school entry or exit, cafeteria or common area “where students are likely to see the national motto display.”

The Tennessee attorney general’s office will be responsibl­e “for defending any litigation brought against the state for such requiremen­ts”

“In today’s society, where we are looking for society to make children safer, this bill is setting a poor example.”

— REP. BO MITCHELL, D-NASHVILLE

by anyone objecting to public tax dollars’ use in the mandatory displays, according to the analysis.

› The House voted 94-0 for a bill sponsored by Rep. Patsy Hazlewood, R-Signal Mountain, which bars children under age 16 from using commercial tanning salons. Now they can use them with signed permission from their parents or a guardian. Under a committee compromise, the bill still allows teens ages 16 to 18 to continue using the facilities but requires parental permission.

“I just think that it’s a good day for Tennessean­s,” Hazlewood said after the vote. “I think we’re going to save some lives and save some young women some heartache down the road.”

› The House voted 96-0 to approve a resolution by Rep. Gerald McCormick, R-Chattanoog­a, that urges the State Capitol Commission to require a planned statue of Tennessee frontiersm­an, congressma­n and Texas hero David “Davy” Crockett be erected where the current statue of slain prohibitio­nist, U.S. senator and former newspaper publisher Edward Carmack now rests.

Carmack’s statue is in front of the state Capitol, above the Motlow Tunnel, an undergroun­d passage into the Capitol. The tunnel underneath alcohol prohibitio­nist Carmack was named decades ago by lawmakers in honor of the family of a legislator, Reagor Motlow, whose family was related to whiskey maker Jack Daniels.

Contact Andy Sher at asher@ timesfreep­ress.com or 615-2550550. Follow him on Twitter @AndySher1.

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