San Francisco Chronicle

Gun lovers have own sanctuary city

Remote desert outpost of Needles takes a jab at state capital

- By John M. Glionna

The whole business began with a backyard barbecue.

Tim Terral, a 50yearold cable company worker recently elected city councilman in Needles, on the rural eastern edge of California, planned a cookout for some buddies who live just over the state line in Arizona.

Nobody wanted to come. Under California law, they couldn’t bring their loaded firearms across the state line, so they all decided to stay home.

“They’re exmilitary,” Terral explained. “I guess those guns are like security blankets.”

For Terral, the incident was more ammunition for a simmering resentment among many of the 5,000 residents of a San Bernardino County town that’s 550 miles and an entire political culture away from the state capital in Sacramento.

Like many inland California­ns, Needles residents say they’re held hostage by state legislator­s who are too liberal and want too much control over their lives. They gripe about strict gun laws they say trample their constituti­onal right to keep and bear arms.

So Terral fought back. He spearheade­d a resolution, passed last month by the council, that declared Needles a Second Amendment sanctuary, a place where both California gun owners and those visiting from outofstate can expect lenient enforcemen­t of the Golden State’s rules governing, for example, ammunition and concealedc­arry permits.

Terral even chose wording to take a swipe at Democratic legislator­s in Sacramento, and in cities such as San Francisco and Los Angeles, who have declared sanctuary policies limiting the involvemen­t of state and local law enforcemen­t in the pursuit of undocument­ed immigrants targeted by the Trump administra­tion.

“With the gun resolution, I purposely chose the word sanctuary to take a stab at all the liberals,” Terral said. “It was a little jab in the eyes.”

Needles residents insist they don’t want to become any Wild West Dodge City where gunslinger­s rule. But they do want to make it easier for interstate travelers who pull off Interstate 40 for food and fuel to avoid a potential felony arrest if a traffic stop produces a loaded gun from outside California.

“With the gun resolution, I purposely chose the word sanctuary to take a stab at all the liberals. It was a little jab in the eyes.” City Councilman Tim Terral, who recently got resolution passed

They also want Sacramento to amend a recently enacted propositio­n that bans gun owners from bringing ammunition from other states, effectivel­y requiring the state’s gun owners to buy their ammunition in California.

Needles Mayor Jeff Williams, a former San Bernardino County sheriff ’s deputy, grumbles at state law every hunting season: “I have to drive 140 miles to Barstow to buy ammunition when right across the border in Arizona there are a dozen gun stores.”

Williams, who carries a Glock 45 9mm pistol, which he says “will throw a big brick at somebody,” is soliciting support from various state border towns — including Yreka, Truckee, Blythe and Eureka — in favor of interstate reciprocit­y for legal gun owners who possess concealedw­eapons permits outside California.

“When Sacramento passes a new law, they look to San Francisco and Los Angeles. They don’t come looking to small towns like us, and it’s time we made our opinions known,” said Williams. “We realize changing state law is pretty farfetched, but you’ve got to start somewhere. You’ve got to stand on principle.”

Assemblyma­n Jay Obernolte, a Republican representi­ng the largely rural 33rd District that includes Needles, supports the town’s gun sanctuary declaratio­n. He plans to introduce a bill in December to give more local control to rural gun owners and allow for interstate reciprocit­y with firearms laws.

Republican­s are a decided minority in the Capitol, and the chances are low that gunrights proponents will get a carveout. But Teresa Trujillo, Obernolte’s chief of staff, said her boss supports more local control for the state’s rural residents.

“These people have a different culture than what’s in Sacramento,” she said. “They should be able to govern themselves with certain things and make decisions that are best for their community.”

Jim Stanley, a spokesman for Assembly Republican­s, agreed that rural residents feel left out of California politics.

“There’s a sense that the bigger cities kind of run things around Sacramento,” he said. “When people feel like they’re not being heard, it’s natural to respond. It’s all about feeling you have a voice in the room.”

And when it comes to hearing voices around Needles, people feel that adjacent states such as Nevada and Arizona better speak their language than Sacramento.

“We’re like an island here in Needles, completely separate from California. The closest city in the state is Blythe, and that’s 100 miles to the south, along a twolane road,” said Terral. “We feel more of a kinship to Arizona and Nevada. I can walk to Arizona in two minutes. I can see it from my front yard. I can’t see Sacramento.”

California’s state capital lies as far away from politicall­y conservati­ve Needles as Atlanta is from Washington. Nobody can remember the last time a Democrat was elected to any office here in a town that voted for Donald Trump in 2016 by a decided margin.

Two years ago, when many California coastal areas passed sanctuary policies on immigratio­n enforcemen­t, Needles took its own stand, declaring that the town was decidedly not a haven for anyone who crosses the U.S. border illegally.

Waitress Robbie Tieman, a 15year foodservin­g veteran here, is a gun owner who lives in Arizona. She probably wouldn’t bring her gun to work. Still, she doesn’t like anyone saying she can’t do it.

“People should be able to carry their guns wherever they go,” she said, refilling a visitor’s cup with coffee. “I know bad people carry guns, but I think they’d be less likely to rob a liquor store if they knew people inside were packing their own firearms.”

At 55, Mayor Williams is a slender man who dresses in formfittin­g suits. He’s a grandfathe­r of 13 who wants Needles to stick around so his grandchild­ren can enjoy it.

But Williams has seen his community lose half its population since the 1960s. To survive, he said, the place needs all the help it can get, and restrictiv­e gun laws are driving visitors — and their money — away from town.

“They’re threatenin­g the lifestyle we’ve built here,” he said.

For his part, Terral just wants California to take its mitts off his gun, and his rights.

“They don’t let you live your life,” he said. “Legislator­s want their finger in every aspect. Given the chance, they’d probably have our paychecks sent directly to Sacramento, and they’d give us back what they thought we needed.”

He recalled recently attending a conference in a beach community south of Los Angeles.

“I walked down the sidewalk and I saw all the signs. You’d couldn’t smoke, ride a skateboard or roller skate. It was all no, no, no,” he said.

He was glad to get back to Needles, “where I wasn’t watching where I walked in case I broke some law I didn’t know anything about.”

 ?? John M. Glionna / CalMatters ?? Needles Councilman Tim Terral (left), with Mayor Jeff Williams, complains that California lawmakers “want their finger in every aspect” of people’s lives.
John M. Glionna / CalMatters Needles Councilman Tim Terral (left), with Mayor Jeff Williams, complains that California lawmakers “want their finger in every aspect” of people’s lives.
 ?? Photos by John Glionna / CalMatters ?? Needles Mayor Jeff Williams, who carries a 9mm Glock pistol, feels more kinship with nearby Arizona.
Photos by John Glionna / CalMatters Needles Mayor Jeff Williams, who carries a 9mm Glock pistol, feels more kinship with nearby Arizona.
 ??  ?? Robbie Tieman, a waitress at the Wagon Wheel restaurant, lives in Arizona and wishes California’s gun laws were more like those in her home state.
Robbie Tieman, a waitress at the Wagon Wheel restaurant, lives in Arizona and wishes California’s gun laws were more like those in her home state.

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