Times Standard (Eureka)

Tentative Senate gun deal has surprises, and loose ends

- By Alan Fram

WASHINGTON » The outline of a bipartisan Senate agreement to rein in gun violence has no game-changing steps banning the deadliest firearms. It does propose measured provisions making it harder for some young gun buyers, or people considered threatenin­g, to have weapons.

And there are meaningful efforts to address mental health and school safety concerns. It all reflects election-year pressure to act both parties feel after mass shootings in May killed 10 people in Buffalo, New York, and 21 more in Uvalde, Texas.

Details of the plan remain in negotiatio­n between Democrats and Republican­s, with disagreeme­nts over how tightly the initiative­s should be drawn. That means the proposal’s potency — and perhaps whether some parts survive — remain undetermin­ed as it’s translated into legislatio­n.

Here’s what’s in and out of the agreement:

A strengthen­ing, narrowly, of background checks

When people age 18 to 20 try buying firearms, the required federal background check would for the first time include their juvenile crime and mental health records. To allow time for getting data from state and local authoritie­s, the process’ current three-day maximum would be extended up to seven more days, according to aides following the talks. Once the 10 days lapse, the buyer could get the weapon, even if the record search is incomplete.

Currently, dealers considered in the “business” of selling guns are required to get federal firearms licenses. Such sellers must conduct background checks. Bargainers want to cover more people who, while not running a formal business, occasional­ly sell weapons.

Other measured curbs

The framework calls for grants to help states enforce or enact “red flag” laws that let authoritie­s get court orders temporaril­y taking guns from people deemed dangerous. Nineteen states and the District of Columbia have such statutes, but some lack funds to enforce them robustly.

Penalties would be toughened for so-called straw purchasers, those buying guns for others who don’t qualify. More current or former romantic partners convicted of domestic abuse, or targeted with restrainin­g orders by their victims, would be barred from getting guns. The ban applies today if the couple was married, lived together or had children together.

Inclusion of the tougher restrictio­ns against straw purchasers and estranged partners were surprises because they’d been blocked by Republican­s before.

Addressing broader problems

Democrats say there will be billions of dollars to expand mental health initiative­s. This would pay for more community behavioral health centers, strengthen­ed suicide prevention and violence interventi­on efforts and increased access to mental telehealth visits.

There would be new sums for school safety. These could include better security at building entrances, training for staff and violence prevention programs. The dollar amount is unclear.

Hurdles ahead

Democrats responsive to constituen­ts who strongly favor gun curbs want the new law to be as stringent as possible. Republican­s want nothing that would turn their adamantly progun voters against them.

This means tough bargaining on the fine print of the legislatio­n.

How narrowly will a new definition of which sellers need federal firearms licenses be written? Are there limits on which juvenile records would be accessible during background checks for younger buyers?

What conditions would states have to meet to qualify for “red flag” funds? What legal protection­s would people have if the authoritie­s consider them too risky to have firearms?

How much money will the package cost? No one has said, though people familiar with the discussion­s say a ballpark $15 billion is possible. And how will it be paid for?

A leader of the effort, Sen. Chris Murphy, DConn., told reporters Monday that bargainers plan to pay for the costs with offsetting spending cuts or new revenues. The latter could be a no-go for Republican­s.

Leaders hope the package can be written and approved before Congress begins its July 4 recess.

 ?? JOSE LUIS MAGANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? People hold signs in the second March for Our Lives rally in support of gun control in front of the Washington Monument, Saturday in Washington. The rally is a successor to the 2018march organized by student protestors after the mass shooting at a high school in Parkland, Fla.
JOSE LUIS MAGANA — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS People hold signs in the second March for Our Lives rally in support of gun control in front of the Washington Monument, Saturday in Washington. The rally is a successor to the 2018march organized by student protestors after the mass shooting at a high school in Parkland, Fla.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States