The Denver Post

GOP passes measure for concealed carry

Legislatio­n likely to fail in Democrat-controlled House

- By Jesse Paul

A measure that would allow Coloradans to carry a concealed gun without a permit passed the Republican-controlled state Senate on Thursday in a vote along party lines amid a national debate about firearms that has seen President Donald Trump and others in the GOP revisiting their stance on gun control.

Senate Bill 97 was sent to the House by a 18-17 tally.

Senate Democrats pushed back against the legislatio­n, which is likely to fail in the Democrat-controlled House.

Sen. Tim Neville, R-Littleton, who brought the legislatio­n, argues that people “shouldn’t have to jump through additional hoops or pay what amounts to a tax because they choose to carry their means of self-defense in a pocket or a purse or otherwise out of sight.”

“This bill has to do strictly with the rights of law-abiding citizens,” Neville said, calling it a matter of personal and public safety.

Democrats raised concerns about the potential dangers of bad actors carrying concealed weapons or people lacking proper training or experience.

“The last thing we should be doing is making it easier to have firearms that people don’t know about,” said Deputy Minority Leader Matt Jones, D-Longmont. “I find it prepostero­us that we bring this. That’s my opinion. And we bring it every year.”

The gun control debate at the Colorado Capitol has been heightened since last month’s high school shooting in South Florida. In February, Democrats in the House rejected three GOP bills to loosen gun regulation­s.

Those bills would have allowed for concealed guns to be carried in schools, repealed the state’s contentiou­s 2013 ban on high-capacity magazines and allowed business owners and employees to use deadly force against intruders, similar to the “make my day” law for homeowners.

Tens of thousands of Coloradans have concealed carry permits. Legislativ­e analysts say in 2017 alone a total of 51,030 concealed carry permits were processed, including 12,293 renewals and 38,737 new applicants.

Democrats at the statehouse have not introduced any major gun-control legislatio­n outside of an effort to ban so-called bump stocks, like the ones used by a gunman last year in Las Vegas.

Republican­s in the Senate have signaled they are not open to any measures limiting gun rights.

The GOP-controlled state legislatur­e in Florida this week, meanwhile, passed gun control measures in the wake of the shooting at Marjorie Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Fla., that left 17 dead.

 ?? David Zalubowski, The Associated Press ?? COLORADO FIREARMS LAW State Sen. Chris Holbert, R-Highlands Ranch, left, confers with Senate President Kevin Grantham, R-Cañon City, during debate on a concealed-carry bill on the floor of the chamber Thursday at the Capitol.
David Zalubowski, The Associated Press COLORADO FIREARMS LAW State Sen. Chris Holbert, R-Highlands Ranch, left, confers with Senate President Kevin Grantham, R-Cañon City, during debate on a concealed-carry bill on the floor of the chamber Thursday at the Capitol.

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