Orlando Sentinel

Panel OKs gun bill

House committee approves Florida’s ‘constituti­onal carry’ bill amid crossfire

- By Ryan Dailey

TALLAHASSE­E — A proposal that would allow Floridians to carry concealed firearms without licenses began moving through the state House on Tuesday, as a debate emerged about whether the bill lives up to the “constituti­onal carry” label given by supporters.

The House Constituti­onal Rights, Rule of Law, & Government Operations Subcommitt­ee voted 10-5 along party lines to approve the measure, after an at-times tense three-hour meeting.

The bill (HB 543) would eliminate a concealed-weapons licensing process that includes people undergoing criminal background checks and completing firearms-training courses. Under the proposal, people with concealed firearms would need to carry valid identifica­tion and “must display such identifica­tion upon demand by a law enforcemen­t officer.”

The majority of more than 100 people who testified or signed up to testify about the measure Tuesday opposed the bill — with numerous gun-rights supporters criticizin­g it for not going far enough. They urged lawmakers to allow what’s known as open carry, meaning firearms would not have to be concealed. Many said the bill’s “constituti­onal carry” moniker was a misnomer.

Chris Rose II of Gainesvill­e described the measure as watered down and expressed frustratio­n at what he characteri­zed as a promise that was not delivered.

“This bill is not constituti­onal carry. This bill is not close to constituti­onal carry. This bill is not what the other half of the country has, and I am fed up with being a second-class citizen to those folks,” Rose told the panel.

Democratic lawmakers heavily criticized the bill as it would eliminate the firearms-training requiremen­t. Rep. Dotie Joseph, D-North Miami, proposed adding various training requiremen­ts to the measure, but the Republican-dominated panel rejected all amendments sought by Democrats.

“It makes no sense that people have to pass an exam to drive a vehicle but not to own a gun,”

Joseph said.

But Pinellas County Sheriff Bob Gualtieri, who spoke in favor of the bill on behalf of the Florida Sheriffs Associatio­n, said current training requiremen­ts tied to the licensing process are “meaningles­s.”

“The training that people get today is really meaningles­s training. It’s this online course for about 30 minutes, and that’s what you get,” Gualtieri said.

Gualtieri said the bill would not change current prohibitio­ns on where people can carry concealed weapons, such as at schools and polling places, and said the bill “protects people’s right to protect themselves.”

Several groups that support gun-control measures warned the bill would make Florida less safe.

“The licensing process that this bill is trying to take away is a vital part of making sure that guns are kept out of the hands of folks that would misuse them,” said Alyssa Akbar of the organizati­on March for Our Lives, which was formed after the 2018 mass shooting at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland.

But Bill sponsor Chuck Brannan, R-Macclenny, described the proposal as simply removing the requiremen­t that gun owners seek the government’s permission to carry firearms.

“If you’ve ever gotten a concealed-weapons permit, it certainly is not extensive training. So I think the difference­s are going to be negligible after this bill,” Brannan said.

The bill, filed for the legislativ­e session that will start March 7, appears to be on a fast track in the House. It now needs approval only from the Judiciary Committee before it can go to the House floor. The Senate does not have a similar bill.

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