Colorado Politics

Gun bill to allow ‘constitutional carry’ passes GOP-led committee

A Republican-led state Senate committee gave a party-line nod to a bill that would allow Coloradans to legally tuck away a gun without getting a concealed carry permit.

Keep the safety on your high hopes, gun-rights supporters. If Senate Bill 116 passes the Senate Finance Committee and ultimately weathers the 18-17 Republican majority on the floor, it faces certain death before the Democrats’ 37-28 majority in the House.

Still, it reminds voters who is on which side of the gun issue.

Republicans Ray Scott of Grand Junction, Kent Lambert of Colorado Springs and Jerry Sonnenberg of Sterling were for scrapping the permits on concealed weapons. Democrats Lois Court of Denver and Steve Fenberg of Boulder were against it.

“If you’re legally eligible to possess a firearm, you should be able to carry that weapon concealed for self-defense without begging for government’s permission,” said Sen. Tim Neville, R-Littleton, the bill’s sponsor.

He called it “common-sense legislation.”

Mary Parker of Ken Caryl, who has a concealed-carry permit, opposed the bill. She said there’s not enough training required now to carry a gun, and allowing untrained people to walk around armed won’t end well.

“Common sense tells me that just like more cars on the roads means more car accidents, more guns in our communities means more gun accidents,” she said.

Parker said new people allowed to carry concealed weapons won’t have any training at all to prove their competency.

“Let’s not give concealed carry permits to people who are unwilling to take a basic gun-safety course,” Parker said.

Other than Denver, most other cities in Colorado allow open carry.

Dan Murphy, representing Rocky Mountain Gun Owners, reiterated Neville’s point that permits are constitutionally dubious and pointless.

“When I’m lawfully open-carrying my legally owned firearm that I did undergo a background check to purchase, putting my coat on does not suddenly make it any more dangerous and should not be punishable under the law,” he said.


PREV

PREVIOUS

Muslim travel ban protesters contest need for permit

A federal judge in Denver was asked to consider whether a Muslim travel ban protester’s sign calling President Trump a “motherf–” has the same free speech protections as an airport celebration to welcome veterans Eric Verlo was told he couldn’t hold the sign with the vulgar accusation at Denver International Airport on Jan. 29, two days […]

NEXT

NEXT UP

Effort to eliminate the death penalty in Colorado fails in emotional hearing

An effort to eliminate the death penalty in Colorado was rejected by a legislative committee Wednesday night after an emotional hearing. The effort from Senate Democratic Leader Lucia Guzman failed on a party-line vote, with Republicans on the Senate Judiciary Committee opposing the proposal. The hearing included tearjerking testimony from people who lost loved ones […]


Welcome Back.

Streak: 9 days i

Stories you've missed since your last login:

Stories you've saved for later:

Recommended stories based on your interests:

Edit my interests