Los Angeles Times

Florida lawmakers pass gun bill

Measure to limit purchases but allow armed school staff heads to governor.

- By Jenny Jarvie

Just weeks after 17 people were killed at a Florida high school, the state’s strongly Republican Legislatur­e passed a landmark bill that would make it tougher to buy guns but would also clear a path for school employees to bring firearms on campus.

The Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School Public Safety Act would raise the minimum age to purchase a firearm from 18 to 21, require a three-day waiting period for most gun purchases and ban the sale or possession of “bump stocks,” which allow semiautoma­tic rifles to behave like machine guns.

The $400-million package — rushed through the last days of the legislativ­e session after students from the Parkland high school encouraged a national debate on school safety — was the first gun control legislatio­n supported by Florida’s House and Senate Republican leadership since the GOP took control of both chambers more than two decades ago.

For hours Wednesday, lawmakers on both sides of the aisle agonized over whether to support the bill. It eventually passed, 67 to 50.

Leaders of the House Democratic caucus urged members to oppose the GOP-sponsored bill on the basis that it allows some teachers and school staff to carry guns on campus and does not go far enough in restrictin­g access to assault rifles and high-capacity ammunition magazines.

Some Republican­s opposed it too, disagreein­g with raising the minimum age to buy a rifle from 18 to 21 or imposing a waiting period for gun sales. Though the state age requiremen­t to purchase handguns is 21, the 19-year-old suspect in the school attack, Nikolas Cruz, was able to legally purchase an AR-15, the semiautoma­tic rifle.

Republican Gov. Rick Scott — who has opposed the idea of arming teachers — declined to say ahead of the House vote whether he would sign the bill.

“When the bill makes it to my desk, I’m going to take the time, I’m going to read the bill, I’m going to talk to families,” he told reporters Wednesday afternoon.

Ryan Petty and Andrew Pollack, fathers of two students killed at Stoneman Douglas, spent days in Tallahasse­e pleading with legislator­s to pass the bill. Late Tuesday, they delivered a letter signed by the families of all 17 victims.

“You must act to prevent mass murder from ever occurring again at any school,” the letter families urged lawmakers. “The moment to pass this bill is now. We must be the last families to suffer the loss of a loved one due to a mass shooting at a school.”

Many Democrats said the so-called guardian program, which would let trained staff bring guns into schools, was a “poison pill” that prevented them from supporting the bill. The measure allows school districts and sheriffs to set up programs that would let staff members — not teachers who solely work in a classroom, but teachers who serve as coaches or Junior ROTC instructor­s, as well as other staff — volunteer to carry guns after 132 hours of firearms training and 12 hours of diversity training.

“At points, it reads like the rough first draft of a Steven Seagal movie, that somehow the cafeteria ladies are going to spring into action and save everything,” said Democratic Rep. Evan Jenne, who represents part of Broward County.

Many black Democrats warned that the program would likely put minority students at risk and that law enforcemen­t officials might be more likely to mistakenly identify black school staff with guns as active shooters.

Yet with Republican­s outnumberi­ng Democrats 76 to 41, critics of the bill did not manage to alter the legislatio­n that narrowly passed the state Senate on Monday.

Enough Democrats ended up voting for the bill — even as they acknowledg­ed it was not perfect — for the measure to pass.

“Blood is crying out from the ground in South Florida and I just cannot be political,” said Rep. Kimberly Daniels, a Democrat from Jacksonvil­le explaining why she would break with the black caucus to support the bill.

The bill, rushed through the Legislatur­e before its session ends Friday, would provide more money for mental health services and give law enforcemen­t officials greater power to temporaril­y seize weapons and ammunition from people with mental health issues or who threaten violence.

“I cannot let the perfect be the enemy of good,” said Rep. Nicholas X. Duran, a Democrat from the Miami area. “I also see today a unique opportunit­y to take a metaphoric­al gut punch to the NRA — grab it by its shirt collar and let it know its power is waning, its influence is fleeting. And this is just round one.”

Tension was also high between the more moderate and conservati­ve wings of the Republican Party.

“I have been called a murderer,” said Rep. Thomas Leek, a Republican who supported the bill. “I have been told I’m abandoning the Constituti­on. I’ve had friends of 20 years question my motives and question our friendship.”

On Tuesday, House Democrats unsuccessf­ully attempted to pass a flurry of amendments that would strengthen the bill’s gun control provisions — to require all those who buy guns to undergo background checks, to ban the sale of assault weapons and to require owners to report stolen guns.

Repeatedly, as Democrats critiqued the bill, they said it did not go far enough to ref lect the wishes of voters across Florida and the nation. A Quinnipiac University poll released Tuesday showed that 58% of American voters oppose allowing teachers and other school officials to carry guns on school grounds. But about 82% support having armed security officers in schools.

“So what do we have before us today? A proposal that arms teachers and does not ban military-style assault weapons,” Rep. Carlos Guillermo Smith, a Democrat from Orlando, said Tuesday, summing up Democrats’ frustratio­n. “This is why people are so fed up with politics!”

When asked why he would not consider universal background checks for guns, the GOP sponsor of the bill, Rep. Jose Oliva, said Tuesday that legislator­s had taken pains to balance increasing demands for safety with gun owners’ constituti­onal rights.

“Whenever we are going to speak to the rights of people, and whenever we are going to in any way abridge those rights,” Oliva said, “I think that we have to walk a fine line and be very careful.”

On Tuesday, students and gun control advocates converged on the state Capitol with placards that said “No armed teachers,” and staged a “die-in” between the House and Senate chambers.

Legislator­s also faced pressure from the National Rifle Assn., which sent out an email accusing House leaders of “bullying” 2nd Amendment supporters to vote for the bill.

“YOU and every other law-abiding gun owner is being blamed for an atrocious act of premeditat­ed murder,” the NRA stated. “Neither the 3-day waiting period on all rifles and shotguns, raising the age from 18 to 21 to buy any firearm, or the bump stock ban will have any effect on crime.”

Jarvie is a special correspond­ent.

 ?? Scott Keeler Tampa Bay Times ?? FLORIDA STATE REP. JOSEPH ABRUZZO speaks during debate on the bill, rushed through the Legislatur­e after the Feb. 14 school shooting in Parkland.
Scott Keeler Tampa Bay Times FLORIDA STATE REP. JOSEPH ABRUZZO speaks during debate on the bill, rushed through the Legislatur­e after the Feb. 14 school shooting in Parkland.

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