Chicago Tribune (Sunday)

Cook County guns and ammo tax back on books

State high court had struck down earlier version

- By Alice Yin

Cook County commission­ers voted Thursday to amend a guns and ammunition tax that was found unconstitu­tional by the Illinois Supreme Court, aiming to give the measure another lifeline by designatin­g that money for violence prevention.

In a 12-2 vote, with three commission­ers absent, the county board approved the amendment, which states all revenue from the firearm and ammunition tax must go toward programs or operations geared toward gun violence prevention. The passage follows an Oct. 21 ruling from the state’s highest court that found the levy was unconstitu­tional.

Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e, who proposed the legislatio­n, said she believes the tweaks will align the ordinance with the Illinois Supreme Court’s opinion that taxes impeding a fundamenta­l right such as the Second Amendment must be used for a “substantia­lly related” cause.

Previously, the $1.6 million annual revenue from the guns and ammunition tax was used for the county’s public safety fund, which includes the criminal justice system.

When asked by a reporter why she strove so hard to save the tax, Preckwinkl­e began reading off statistics on gun violence in Chicago, including the fact that shootings in 2021 are up 10% compared with this time last year.

“The cost of a bullet

should reflect, even if just a little bit, the cost of the violence that ultimately is not possible without the bullet,” Preckwinkl­e said.

In 2012, the county board passed a $25 tax on gun purchases in Cook County; it was amended in 2015 to add a 1- to 5-cent-per-cartridge tax for ammunition. A gun rights organizati­on sued later that year in Cook County Circuit Court, and the case made its way to the

Illinois Supreme Court.

The board’s two Republican commission­ers, Sean Morrison and Peter Silvestri, opposed the amendment. Before the vote, Morrison read a separate opinion from Illinois Supreme Court Justice Michael Burke that said, “The majority’s analysis wrongly leaves the door open for a municipali­ty to enact a future tax on firearms or ammunition that is more narrowly tailored to

the purpose of ameliorati­ng the cost of gun violence.”

Burke also wrote, “The only problem with that approach is that it would still violate the Illinois Constituti­on.”

Morrison said the revised amendment still is “glaringly in violation” of the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constituti­on. He added he was concerned the board approved this change when the Illinois Supreme Court’s order has not been finalized.

That issue stems from the state Supreme Court sending the matter back to the circuit court to grant final judgment, which likely will not happen until Nov. 23, according to a Laura Lechowicz Felicione, legal counsel for Preckwinkl­e’s office. The unconstitu­tionality ruling won’t come into play until that happens, she said.

“Clearly, what we’re stating here is that we’re going to try and play ‘beat the clock’ on getting around a state constituti­on,” Morrison said. “Why we’re rushing this through given the fact that our state Supreme Court ruled against it is to me, just, I don’t understand it.”

Commission­er Larry Suffredin, a Democrat and vocal gun control advocate, brushed off Morrison’s warnings. He noted that Burke was acting as a “lone justice” when he issued his opinion against future taxes with a narrower focus.

“Commission­er Morrison tries to literally read a Supreme Court decision without understand­ing the interactio­n of the constituti­on,” Suffredin said. “We are well within the time frame that is allowed under the law. We are acting in good faith here.”

 ?? M. SPENCER GREEN/AP ?? Ammunition lines the shelves of a gun shop in Tinley Park in 2012 as Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e was proposing a tax.
M. SPENCER GREEN/AP Ammunition lines the shelves of a gun shop in Tinley Park in 2012 as Cook County Board President Toni Preckwinkl­e was proposing a tax.

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