The Ukiah Daily Journal

California advances gun control bills amid Texas school massacre

- By Emily Hoeven

As news traveled around the country Tuesday of a mass shooting at a Texas elementary school that left at least 22 dead — including 19 children, two adults and the 18-year-old gunman — California lawmakers were advancing a package of gun control bills, including one sponsored by Gov. Gavin Newsom that co-opts the structure of Texas' abortion ban to crack down on illegal firearms.

The striking timing highlighte­d a shared challenge facing California, Texas and other states: reducing gun deaths, which have ticked up dramatical­ly nationwide amid the pandemic.

But it also served as a launchpad for Newsom — a relentless critic of Texas — and other top Democratic officials to castigate Republican­s for refusing to support tougher restrictio­ns on guns.

Newsom tweeted: “Another shooting. And the GOP won't do a damn thing about it. Who the hell are we if we cannot keep our kids safe. This is preventabl­e. Our inaction is a choice.”

Attorney General Rob Bonta tweeted: “These are our children. Our babies. This is sick. And I'm damn angry. The GOP continues to prioritize the gun lobby over the LIVES of our children.”

Democratic legislator­s invoked the Texas shooting on multiple occasions during a marathon Senate floor session Tuesday: “One more gun death is too many,” said state Sen. Anthony Portantino of Glendale, urging support for the bill inspired by Texas' abortion ban that would give private California­ns the right to sue manufactur­ers, sellers and distributo­rs of illegal assault weapons, ghost guns and certain other firearms and to collect at least $10,000 in civil damages per weapon.

The proposal passed on a close-to-party-line vote: Democratic state Sen. Melissa Hurtado of Sanger voted with the Republican­s in opposition.

Following last week's culling of more than 200 bills in a highly secretive and opaque process, the Assembly and Senate are rushing to pass hundreds of bills ahead of a Friday deadline for proposals to clear the house in which they were introduced.

Here's a look at other gun proposals moving forward:

• A bill to require school officials to report any “perceived threat” of a mass shooting event to law enforcemen­t and mandate districts to share safe gun storage informatio­n with families of middle and high school students.

• A bill to ban gun shows and firearm sales on state property.

• A bill to require licensed firearm dealers to have digital video surveillan­ce, burglary alarm and keyless entry systems; carry general liability insurance; and complete annual training.

• A bill to ban the advertisin­g of certain firearms to minors. And here's a rundown of other high-profile bills that advanced to the other house:

• A proposal to allow California parents to sue social media companies for harms caused by hooking their kids on addictive algorithms.

• A proposal to require schools to continue COVID-19 testing and create testing plans in conjunctio­n with the state.

• A slew of proposals to expand abortion access for both in-state and out-ofstate patients and protect them and providers from civil and criminal liability.

• A proposal to force companies to include pay ranges in job postings and let workers know when promotion opportunit­ies are available.

 ?? JORDAN VONDERHAAR — GETTY IMAGES ?? Law enforcemen­t work the scene in Uvalde, Texas, after a mass shooting at Robb Elementary School where 19people, including 18children, were killed on May 24.
JORDAN VONDERHAAR — GETTY IMAGES Law enforcemen­t work the scene in Uvalde, Texas, after a mass shooting at Robb Elementary School where 19people, including 18children, were killed on May 24.

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