Florida News Connection
By: Trimmel Gomes
In a Republican supermajority, Florida lawmakers
are advancing bills that would remove mandatory training and fees to carry
concealed weapons. So-called "permitless carry" has raised alarming
new concerns among many Democrats, gun-control advocates and some
law-enforcement officials.
Leon County Sheriff Walt McNeil said he doesn't support the measures because
interacting with people carrying weapons becomes much more difficult for his
deputies. He pointed to an ongoing challenge within law enforcement of distinguishing
between "good guys" and "bad guys" with guns.
"Trying to make those distinctions in the heat of a situation that you're
responding to just changes the dynamic of our interactions with citizens,
exponentially," he said, "and so I just don't know the answer to
those questions."
Second Amendment advocates also are critical of the bills, for not going far
enough to allow "open carry" of guns in the state, which some
describe as "constitutional carry." Currently, to get a
concealed-carry permit, a Florida resident must have undergone firearms
training, along with clearing a background check that shows they aren't a
convicted felon and don't fall under a host of other restrictions.
State Sen. Jay Collins, R-Tampa, who's sponsoring the Senate
bill, said he believes the right to carry a concealed firearm should
be "without a government permission slip."
McNeil said he supports dropping the fees to acquire permits, but thinks the
training and everything else should remain in place.
"Our constitutional right to carry a weapon, we should have that without
having to pay for it, and we can achieve that simply by dropping the fee,"
he said. "The other things don't seem to bear any logic, from a community
perspective."
The House
version of the bill includes school safety measures, such as
expanding the school guardian program to allow private-school staff to be
armed. It would also establish a program for firearm-sniffing dogs on school
campuses and $1.5 million in grants so law-enforcement agencies can provide
free gun-safety courses to the public.
Florida
currently has 2.6 million concealed-weapons permits.
Content for this Post is provided by Florida News
Connection, a Bureau of Public News Service.
Public News Service is a member of the The Trust Project.
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