The Columbus Dispatch

NY overhauls handgun restrictio­ns

State tries to preserve some limits after Supreme Court decision

- Marina Villeneuve

ALBANY, N.Y. – New York lawmakers approved a sweeping overhaul Friday of the state’s handgun licensing rules, seeking to preserve some limits on firearms after the Supreme Court ruled that most people have a right to carry a handgun for personal protection.

The measure, signed by Gov. Kathy Hochul after passing both chambers by wide margins, is almost sure to draw more legal challenges from gun rights advocates who said the state is still putting too many restrictio­ns on who can get guns and where they can carry them.

Hochul, a Democrat, called the Democrat-controlled Legislatur­e back to Albany to work on the law after the highcourt ruling overturnin­g the state’s longstandi­ng licensing restrictio­ns.

Backers said the law, which takes effect Sept. 1, strikes the right balance between complying with the Supreme Court’s ruling and keeping weapons out of the hands of people likely to use them recklessly or with criminal intent.

But some Republican lawmakers, opposed to tighter restrictio­ns, argued the law violated the constituti­onal right to bear arms.

They predicted it too would end up being overturned.

Among other things, the state’s new rules will require people applying for a handgun license to turn over a list of their social media accounts so officials could verify their “character and conduct.”

Applicants will have to show they have “the essential character, temperamen­t and judgment necessary to be entrusted with a weapon and to use it only in a manner that does not endanger oneself and others.”

As part of that assessment, applicants have to turn over a list of social media accounts they’ve maintained in the past three years.

“Sometimes, they’re telegraphi­ng their intent to cause harm to others,” Hochul said at a news conference.

Gun rights advocates and Republican leaders were incensed, saying the legislatio­n not only violated the Second Amendment, but also privacy and free speech rights.

“New Yorkers’ constituti­onal freedoms were just trampled on,” state Republican Chair Nick Langworthy said.

The bill approved by lawmakers doesn’t specify whether applicants will be required to provide licensing officers with access to private social media accounts not visible to the general public.

People applying for a license to carry a handgun will also have to provide four character references, take 16 hours of firearms safety training plus 2 hours of

practice at a range, undergo periodic background checks and turn over contact informatio­n for their spouse, domestic partner or any other adults living in their household.

Hochul’s chief attorney, Elizabeth Fine, insisted the state was setting out “a very clear set of eligibilit­y criteria” and noted the legislatio­n includes an appeals process.

The measure signed into law Friday also fixes a recently passed law that barred sales of some types of bullet-resistant vests to the general public. The previous law inadverten­tly left out many types of body armor, including the type worn by a gunman who killed 10 Black people in an alleged racist attack on a Buffalo supermarke­t.

The Supreme Court’s ruling struck down a 109-year-old state law that required people to demonstrat­e an unusual threat to their safety to qualify for a license to carry a handgun outside their homes. That restrictio­n generally limited the licenses to people who had worked in law enforcemen­t or had another special need that went beyond routine public safety concerns.

Under the new system, the state won’t authorize permits for people with criminal conviction­s within the past five years for driving while intoxicate­d, menacing or third-degree assault.

People also won’t be allowed to carry firearms at a long list of “sensitive places,” including New York City’s tourist-packed Times Square.

That list also includes schools, universiti­es, government buildings, places where people have gathered for public protests, health care facilities, places of worship, libraries, public playground­s and parks, day care centers, summer camps, addiction and mental health centers, shelters, public transit, bars, theaters, stadiums, museums, polling places and casinos.

New York will also bar people from bringing guns into any business or workplace unless the owners put up signs saying guns are welcome. People who bring guns into places without such signs could be prosecuted on felony charges.

That’s a reverse approach from many other states where businesses that want to keep guns out are usually required to post signs indicating weapons aren’t allowed.

Gun advocates said the law infringes on rights upheld by the Supreme Court.

“Now we’re going to let the pizzeria owner decide whether or not I can express my constituti­onal right,” said Sen. Andrew Lanza, a Staten Island Republican. “This is a disgrace. See you in the courts.”

“New Yorkers’ constituti­onal freedoms were just trampled on.”

Nick Langworthy, chairman of the New York State Republican Committee.

 ?? PHOTOS BY HANS PENNINK/AP ?? New York’s new gun legislatio­n signed by Gov. Kathy Hochul is likely to draw legal challenges from gun rights advocates who say the state is still putting too many restrictio­ns on who can get guns and where they can carry them.
PHOTOS BY HANS PENNINK/AP New York’s new gun legislatio­n signed by Gov. Kathy Hochul is likely to draw legal challenges from gun rights advocates who say the state is still putting too many restrictio­ns on who can get guns and where they can carry them.
 ?? ?? Members of the New York Senate debate legislatio­n to consider new firearms regulation­s for concealed-carry permits during a special legislativ­e session Friday.
Members of the New York Senate debate legislatio­n to consider new firearms regulation­s for concealed-carry permits during a special legislativ­e session Friday.

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