Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Campus gun rules approved by panel

Firearms in dorm rooms stir debate

- JOHN MORITZ

Arkansas State Police rules for an “enhanced” concealed-carry licensing program cleared their last legislativ­e hurdle Friday, bringing the state one step closer to allowing gun owners to take their weapons onto public college campuses and into bars and other public buildings.

Nearly two hours of debate saw two unusual allies try to defeat the rules and spike the implementa­tion of Arkansas’ so-called campus-carry law, Act 562 of 2017, which lawmakers passed in the spring toward the end of a regular legislativ­e session.

Democrats raised concerns during the debate that the rules were written to allow guns inside dormitory rooms, which they said violated the legislativ­e intent of the law. Some Republican­s, on the other hand, said the rules weren’t needed at all under a plain reading of the Second Amendment of the U.S. Constituti­on.

But the Legislativ­e Council, in a 24 to 12 vote with ayes cast by Republican­s and some centrist Democrats, overcame the opposition and approved the rules, allowing the state to move toward issuing the enhanced-carry licenses. Those who want enhanced licenses will have to take additional training and meet marksmansh­ip requiremen­ts to prepare them for active-shooter situations.

The extra training can begin once instructor­s take their additional tests required by the rules, according to a state police spokesman.

Some concealed-carry license instructor­s have said they don’t like the enhanced-license rules, which require them to offer both the regular and additional courses.

Rep. Bob Ballinger, R-Hindsville, attempted to alleviate those concerns, promising that lawmakers would return during the fiscal session early next year to amend the law and make the courses optional for instructor­s.

But opposing Republican­s said implementi­ng rules could have immediate consequenc­es if gun in-

structors stopped offering the training altogether.

“If you pass this today, the clock starts ticking,” said Rep. Kim Hammer, R-Benton, who successful­ly moved to table considerat­ion of the rules at a committee meeting earlier in the week.

Had the Legislativ­e Council failed to approve the rules, state police would not have been able to enforce them, effectivel­y blocking the state from issuing any enhanced licenses, said Marty Garrity, the director of the Bureau of Legislativ­e Research. The Legislativ­e Council is a body of lawmakers that meets between legislativ­e sessions to watch over state government actions.

Failing to approve the rules also could have opened up the state or the Legislatur­e to a lawsuit by someone hoping to force them to implement the rules, which were required by Act 562, she told lawmakers who inquired about the consequenc­es of voting down the rules.

House Speaker Jeremy Gillam, R-Judsonia, summed up the opposition to the rules as ”buyer’s remorse on the vote taken in the session.”

Some of the opponents had strong feelings about the way the campus-carry law was passed earlier this year.

Sen. Bryan King, R-Green Forest, called the legislatio­n a “debacle,” while Rep. Greg Leding, D-Fayettevil­le, said the continued squabbles “prove how quickly and haphazardl­y [Act 562] was approved.”

Before Act 562 was passed in the spring, supporters had to pull it out of a committee where the members were at a stalemate. After giving the bill final approval, lawmakers had to make changes after officials from several collegiate athletics conference­s complained about the possibilit­y of guns being allowed at sporting events.

The chief concern voiced by Leding and other Democrats was that the rules skirted language in the law making it illegal to store a handgun in a college dormitory.

Under the state police rules, storage does not include when the gun is within arm’s reach of the licensee. Mary Claire McLaurin, an attorney for the agency, said it was a “difficult process” to tailor the rules specifical­ly to the law, and that the law did not prohibit carrying inside dormitorie­s.

“A lot of people would say, ‘Well, I sleep with it under my pillow, I sleep with it in my bedside table, it’s readily acceptable for use,’” McLaurin said. “All of those things are what we consider possession.”

Sen. Joyce Elliott, D-Little Rock, said any rule that would allow guns inside dormitorie­s was inconsiste­nt with the legislativ­e intent of Act 562. She objected to approving the rules on that ground.

That prompted Sen. Gary Stubblefie­ld, R-Branch, to raise his own objection on the grounds that the rules violated the Second Amendment to the U.S. Constituti­on, which he said trumps whatever the state Legislatur­e has to say about where gun owners can carry.

The Second Amendment states: “A well regulated Militia, being necessary to the security of a free State, the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”

What followed Stubblefie­ld’s objection was a quagmire of motions and questions about what the Legislativ­e Council was actually asked to vote on. At one point, Elliott and Stubblefie­ld tried to merge their objections into one, before deciding to move on with two separate votes about whether either senator had grounds to object to the rules being approved.

Stubblefie­ld’s motion sank on a voice vote. Faced with no other way to oppose the rules, he and several other Republican­s then voted in support of Elliott’s objection, which failed by a vote of 24 to 12.

With the objections voted down, the rule was approved.

After the meeting, Ballinger reiterated that he wanted use the fiscal session in February to “clean up” language in the gun law to allow instructor­s to forgo teaching the enhanced courses. He said that because those instructor­s have six months to get certified to teach the enhanced course, none of them should be affected if they decide against doing so before the fiscal session.

Fiscal sessions are held to consider only appropriat­ions bills. Two-thirds of each house must agree to consider a nonappropr­iation bill during the fiscal session. The next fiscal session starts Feb. 12 and is to last 30 calendar days unless extended by three-fourths vote by both houses.

Democrats will look to bring up their own changes to the campus-carry legislatio­n, namely the issue of carrying in dorm rooms, during the fiscal session, said Sen. Will Bond, D-Little Rock.

Both he and Leding said they would need to do more research before deciding where they stand on the concerns Republican­s raised regarding what courses instructor­s have to teach.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States