The Oklahoman

Activists rally for better gun laws

Moms Demand Action descends on Capitol

- Aspen Ford and Jessie Christophe­r Smith

Gun safety advocates Moms Demand Action gathered at the state Capitol.

More than 50 gun safety advocates rallied Monday morning at the Oklahoma Capitol to demand legislator­s strengthen the state’s gun laws.

Members and volunteers of the Oklahoma chapter of Moms Demand Action – a nationwide movement that started after the Sandy Hook elementary school shooting more than 10 years ago – and the parent nonprofit Everytown for Gun Safety gathered on the steps of the Capitol to call for tightening gun loopholes and passing commonsens­e gun reform.

“I know we’re dealing with a false reputation here that we’re trying to take people’s guns, but we’re gun owners,” said Beth Furnish, a volunteer leader for the Moms Demand Action chapter. “Like a lot of Oklahomans, we have firearms at home. We have veterans. We have a broad representa­tion of concerned people that are just fed up with lawmakers not doing anything to address gun violence that’s impacting people’s lives.”

Several other participan­ts at the rally voiced similar feelings, emphasizin­g that they were not opposed to the Second Amendment of the U.S. Constituti­on and the right to bear arms, but felt that passing “reasonable regulation­s” would help lessen higher rates of gun violence.

Cacky Poarch, 55, said she joined Oklahoma’s Moms Demand Action after the Parkland shooting in 2018, and feels compelled by the mass shootings she sees in media reports to advocate for more gun safety.

“We, of course, have seen so many school shootings over and over and over,” Poarch said. “Unfettered access to firearms makes us less safe on so many levels.”

Joshua Harris-Till, a cousin of the late Emmett Till, also joined the group Monday. He said people in his family have been affected by gun violence and believes the state needs to do a better job preventing people with histories of mental health issues from having such easy access to firearms.

“My two little brothers were 13 and 10 the first time they got shot, and I lost my sister to that,” Harris-Till said. “It’s something that’s extremely important. And there’s multiple stories for folks in our organizati­on who relate to things like that, who don’t want other families to go through what they’ve gone through.”

Harris-Till told The Oklahoman he believes that many of the state’s legislator­s, who are overwhelmi­ngly Republican, don’t necessaril­y advocate so fiercely for loosening gun restrictio­ns because they believe the bills will make it out of committee, but because they want to remain part of a national narrative and need to “prove they’re more 2A than the next guy.”

“It’s not like their constituen­ts are saying, ‘Hey, we need more pro-gun bills’; it’s them saying, ‘Hey, I have to be pro-gun to be reelected,’” Harris-Till said, attributin­g the state’s hyper-partisan focus on guns to “demagoguer­y.”

State Rep. Trish Ranson, D-Stillwater, championed a bill that would repeal the state’s 2020 anti-red flag law and allow for “extreme risk protection orders” that prohibit or temporaril­y remove firearms from an individual if they pose a threat to themselves or others. Ranson said the bill never even had

“We have a broad representa­tion of concerned people that are just fed up with lawmakers not doing anything to address gun violence.”

Beth Furnish Volunteer leader, Moms Demand Action

a committee hearing.

“But I wanted to start the conversati­on,” Ranson said. “I think we need to have common sense gun laws so that way everyone is safe, but not just gun owners.”

Ranson said she is often discourage­d by the state’s high rate of domestic abuse and increasing­ly vitriolic rhetoric against teachers who, under some proposals, could even be asked to carry firearms in place of security personnel. Ranson believes it would be unhealthy for both the teachers and the students to have the dynamics of the classroom complicate­d by a gun.

“I just feel like there will be a time when things balance out and the pendulum will swing back and we’ll be able to find some common sense gun laws that we can put in place,” Ranson said

State Sen. Julia Kirt was scheduled to speak at the rally but could not attend due to illness. Her office provided a statement of support.

“I always appreciate having people in the People’s House voicing their concerns and sharing the common sense reforms they see to issues like gun violence,” Kirt’s statement read.

Some advocates consider SB 1046 a bill proposed by state Sen. Darrell Weaver and state Rep. Robert Manger that would make the first conviction of violence against a pregnant woman a felony — as the most viable proposal out of Oklahoma’s current Legislatur­e.

But activists with Moms Demand Action hope that continued advocacy will bring awareness to other statewide proposals.

“The gun violence doesn’t stop, so we are going to keep showing up,” Furnish said. “Until lawmakers respond to the people in this state, we’re going to keep coming. We make our presence known, we’re watching, we’re demanding that they do something.”

 ?? PHOTOS BY DOUG HOKE/THE OKLAHOMAN ?? Members and volunteers of the Oklahoma chapter of Moms Demand Action and the parent nonprofit Everytown for Gun Safety gathered Monday on the steps of the Capitol to call for tightening gun loopholes and passing common sense gun reform.
PHOTOS BY DOUG HOKE/THE OKLAHOMAN Members and volunteers of the Oklahoma chapter of Moms Demand Action and the parent nonprofit Everytown for Gun Safety gathered Monday on the steps of the Capitol to call for tightening gun loopholes and passing common sense gun reform.
 ?? ?? Candace Frates, of Tulsa, claps Monday at Moms Demand Action rally on the south plaza of the Capitol. andndndndd­ndndndd
Candace Frates, of Tulsa, claps Monday at Moms Demand Action rally on the south plaza of the Capitol. andndndndd­ndndndd
 ?? ?? Members of the Oklahoma chapter of Moms Demand Action rally Monday on the south plaza of the Capitol.
Members of the Oklahoma chapter of Moms Demand Action rally Monday on the south plaza of the Capitol.

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