(Scott Sommerdorf | Tribune file photo)
Rep. John Mathis, R-Vernal, is sponsoring a bill that would do away with
the need for a concealed-weapons permit and allow any Utahn 21 or older
without a criminal record to carry a gun, concealed or openly.
Utah bill would do away with need for concealed-gun permit
Gun rights » 21? Clean record? Good enough to carry a concealed weapon; proposal would mirror Vermont’s law.
By David Montero
| The Salt Lake Tribune
First Published Jan 22 2013 05:55 pm • Last Updated Jan 23 2013 10:06 am
Any Utah resident would be able to carry a
firearm without obtaining a concealed weapons permit provided the person
is over 21 and isn’t prohibited from doing so due to criminal
convictions, according to a new bill proposed by a Republican lawmaker.
Rep. John Mathis, R-Vernal, released the bill
Monday that would essentially make Utah a constitutional-carry state by
recognizing the sovereignty of the Second Amendment of the U.S.
Constitution. Currently, there are about a half-dozen states that
operate as constitutional-carry gun states.
Esther Cheslea-McCarty, the legislative associate general counsel who drafted HB76, said it mirrored Vermont’s gun law.
"It’s a situation where you can carry a weapon without a permit, and it can be concealed or not concealed," she said.
The state issued 77,062 concealed weapons
permits in 2012, according to Utah Department of Public Safety Firearms
Supervisor Jason Chapman.
Chapman said close to 30 percent of those
permits are for Utah residents — the remainder were issued to
out-of-state applicants. Utah’s concealed-weapons permit is recognized
in 33 states and is considered one of the most popular ones to obtain.
It runs $46 for Utah residents and $51 for out-of-state applicants.
Clark Aposhian, chairman of the Utah Shooting
Sports Council, said his group is supportive of the proposal and said it
was a "minor" change to state law.
"It doesn’t have anything to do with [Newtown,]
Connecticut, Columbine or Aurora," Aposhian said. "You still have to be
lawfully in possession of the firearm. You can’t be a felon. You’re
still subject to brandishing laws and not being under the influence of
drugs and alcohol. And you can’t go onto a school campus."
Utah is one of two states — Kansas being the
other — where concealed weapons permit holders can lawfully carry on
school campuses. The Mathis proposal wouldn’t change that — you’d still
have to have a concealed-carry permit to be in possession of a firearm
on a school campus.
House Minority Leader Jennifer Seelig, D-Salt Lake City, said her Democratic caucus hadn’t had a chance to discuss the measure.
Mathis, a veterinarian in Vernal, did not return calls for comment.
But Seelig said her own initial concerns
centered around legislation that was "fear-based" instead of looking to
balance rights. She said guns would likely be the subject of a "robust"
discussion when the session begins.
"Part of this discussion needs to involve the
balancing of rights," she said. "Community rights, the rights of the
individual to be safe — and the right to bear arms is situationally
contextual related to the forming of a militia."
The gun debate has heated up nationally in the
wake of the Sandy Hook Elementary School Shooting that left 20
first-graders dead. President Barack Obama has asked Congress to
institute an assault-weapons ban, reduce the size of magazines on
firearms and tighten background checks.
On Saturday, about 1,500 people gathered at the
Utah Capitol to rally on Gun Appreciation Day and Brian Greene, a newly
elected Republican House member from Pleasant Grove, said he would
carry a bill to allow local sheriffs to arrest federal agents attempting
to seize guns from Utah residents.
Also, a strongly worded letter signed by the
Utah Sheriffs’ Association to the president said the elected county law
enforcement officials were "prepared to trade our lives" in defense of
the Second Amendment.
Salt Lake County Sheriff Jim Winder, the only
sheriff in the state not a member of association, said he hadn’t seen
Mathis’ bill and hadn’t taken a position on it.
But he said the concealed-weapons permit
process allows for people to learn if they’re eligible to carry a
firearm or not. He said people could be putting themselves at odds with
the law by purchasing and carrying a gun without even knowing that they
weren’t eligible to do so. He also said it’s helpful to officers who
make a stop to know if a person is carrying a concealed weapon.
"It helps us to know that information so we don’t have a misunderstanding or have any problems arise," Winder said.
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