Imperial Valley Press

Lawmakers around US take action on gun-control bills

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State lawmakers across the U.S. are considerin­g new laws in the wake of the Florida high school shooting, and legislatur­es from Maine to Alaska took action on Wednesday.

A rundown of what’s happening in statehouse­s:

ALASKA

Lawmakers had mixed reactions to legislatio­n that would let authoritie­s temporaril­y take guns from people deemed to be a danger to themselves or others. While the measure has been pending for more than a year, it got its first hearing before the House Judiciary Committee and received strong support during public testimony.

CALIFORNIA

A proposal introduced in the state Senate on Wednesday would raise the age for buying rifles and shotguns from 18 to 21 and prevent people from buying more than one firearm within a 30-day window.

Those restrictio­ns are already in place for handgun purchases in California, and the measure would extend it to long guns.

ILLINOIS

The state House endorsed proposals to ban bump stocks, raise the minimum age to 21 for buying assault-style weapons, and create state licensing of gun dealers. The bump-stock ban and higher age for assault-style gun sales need Senate approval, but lawmakers expect quick action.

NEW JERSEY

Lawmakers advanced a half-dozen measures to tighten the state’s already-strict gun laws.

The bills include one to require the seizure of firearms when a mental health profession­al determines someone poses a threat and another to require background checks for private gun sales.

NEW YORK

Republican­s in the state Senate blocked an effort by Democrats to force a vote on four gun control bills.

The bills would have strengthen­ed the state’s background check system and set aside state funding for research into firearm violence. Others would have banned bump stocks and created a new protection order to bar people considered to be a danger to themselves or others from possessing guns.

MAINE

The Legislativ­e Council approved a “red flag” bill allowing police to temporaril­y confiscate guns of those deemed to be a danger, a bill aimed at raising awareness of those who could pose a danger and one authorizin­g borrowing for school security. The approvals mean lawmakers will debate the bills in the coming weeks. Lawmakers rejected bills aimed at banning high-capacity magazines and bump stocks.

 ??  ?? State Representa­tive Marty Moylan speaks on the floor before members of the House vote on legislatio­n prohibitin­g bump stock and trigger cranks during a session at the State Capitol on Wednesday in Springfiel­d, Ill. ARMANDO L. SANCHEZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE
State Representa­tive Marty Moylan speaks on the floor before members of the House vote on legislatio­n prohibitin­g bump stock and trigger cranks during a session at the State Capitol on Wednesday in Springfiel­d, Ill. ARMANDO L. SANCHEZ/CHICAGO TRIBUNE

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