Multiple Anti-Gun Bills Filed in Texas for 2017

Corruption Bribes Bloomberg Gun Banners Everytown
New Yorks’ Michael Bloomberg funded national gun control groups: Everytown for Gun Safety & Moms Demand Action are supporting the pre-filed bad bills.
Texas State Rifle Association
Texas State Rifle Association

Texas – -(Ammoland.com)- Today the 85th regular session of the 2017 Texas Legislature gavels into session. It begins the slow, plodding process of reviewing and creating Texas law.

While Texas is blessed with a strong Republican majority in its Legislature, all Texas gun owners remain at risk.

The pre-filing of legislation began in mid-November. Since that time, dozens of pro-Second Amendment bills have been filed and have been assigned bill numbers.

Pro Gun Bills, including but not limited to:

  • Senate Bill 16 by Sen. Robert Nichols (R-Jacksonville) & Sen. Joan Huffman (R-Houston) eliminates original and renewal application fees for a License To Carry. The $140 fee for an original license is $140 and one of the highest in the country and has not changed since 1995, despite advances in technology and passage of laws streamlining the license application and issuing process.
  • Senate Bill 16 by Sen. Robert Nichols (R-Jacksonville) & Sen. Joan Huffman (R-Houston) eliminates original and renewal application fees for a License To Carry. The $140 fee for an original license is $140 and one of the highest in the country and has not changed since 1995, despite advances in technology and passage of laws streamlining the license application and issuing process.
  • Senate Bill 133 by Sen. Brandon Creighton (R-Conroe) establishes a Second Amendment sales tax holiday, exempting firearms and hunting supplies from the state sales tax during the last Saturday and Sunday in August before hunting season starts.
  • Senate Bill 263 by Rep. Charles Perry (R-Lubbock) removes the minimum caliber requirement for the License To Carry proficiency exam. Currently, individuals seeking a handgun license are required to test with a .32 handgun or larger caliber.
  • Senate Bill 349 by Sen. Creighton clarifies the definition of “school-sponsored activity” in the Penal Code to avoid the establishment of roving gun-free zones in buildings or areas that are not owned by or under the control of an educational institution.
  • House Bill 56 by Rep. Dan Flynn (R-Van) would allow first responders with LTCs to carry in prohibited and posted locations while engaged in official duties.
  • House Bill 339 by Rep. Dustin Burrows (R-Lubbock) eliminates original and renewal LTC application fees (similar to SB 16).
  • House Bill 375 by Rep. Jonathan Stickland (R-Bedford) would allow individuals who are not prohibited by law from possessing a firearm to carry without a license.
  • House Bill 403 by Rep. Drew Springer (R-Muenster) removes the minimum caliber requirement for the LTC proficiency exam (similar to SB 263).
  • House Bill 485 by Rep. Pat Fallon (R-Frisco) establishes a Second Amendment sales tax holiday (similar to SB 133).
  • House Bill 560 by Rep. Springer would eliminate “gun-free zones” for persons possessing valid LTCs.
  • House Bill 606 by Rep. Springer provides immunity to property or business owners who elect not to post their premises off-limits to LTCs with 30.06 and/or 30.07 signs.

Bad Gun Related Bills!

On the other side of the coin and advocated by the Michael Bloomberg supported national gun control group: Everytown for Gun Safety/Moms Demand Action (along with their state partners, Texas Gun Sense) support the pre-filed bad bills listed below, with more being filed every day.

All below are proposals to restrict your Second Amendment rights and many were defeated in past decades.

Don’t be fooled by attempts to re-package the language as “sensible public safety measures” or “common-sense solutions to gun violence” – most, if not all of these are straight out of Bloomberg’s anti-gun playbook.

Bills adding restrictions on Texas gun owners include, but are not limited to, the following:

  • Senate Bill 221 by Sen. Jose Menendez (D-San Antonio) prohibits the transfer of a firearm to a person the actor knows to be listed in the terrorist screening database maintained by the FBI – a secret government list that neither the state nor any individual has access to.
  • Senate Bill 222 by Sen. Menendez designates June as “Gun Violence Awareness Month.” New York – home of gun bans, magazine restrictions and Everytown’s billionaire financier Bloomberg – is the only state to have adopted similar legislation, which gun control groups have used as a platform to promote themselves and their positions.
  • House Bill 111 by Rep. Joe Moody (D-El Paso) requires the Department of Public Safety to create a “firearms safety educational program” involving the development and publishing of secure gun storage pamphlets to be distributed through federal firearm licensed dealers (paid for out of LTC program funds.) This is already required under federal law and the firearms industry offers free gun lock and safety information distribution to law enforcement departments across the country.
  • House Bill 191 by Rep. Diego Bernal (D-San Antonio) reduces the minimum size, lettering and possibly the language requirements for 30.06 signs that have been in effect for over 20 years, and require them to be made available for download on DPS’ website. The net effect would be less effective notice for LTCs and more locations being posted off-limits to license holders. (The same requirements would apply to 30.07 signs as well.)
  • House Bill 246 by Rep. Raphael Anchia (D-Dallas) returns “No Carry” signs to the days of the pictogram. The proliferation of such signs immediately after passage of Texas’ concealed carry law more than two decades ago was what lead to the creation of the more uniform, consistent and recognizable 30.06 signs in the first place.
  • House Bill 255 by Rep. Anchia expands prohibited locations in statute for LTCs to include recreational areas and venues such as indoor or outdoor arenas, stadiums, golf courses, automobile racetracks, amphitheaters, auditoriums, theaters, museums, zoos and civic or convention centers.
  • House Bill 259 by Rep. Anchia restricts the private transfer of firearms at gun shows – a favorite target of the gun control crowd – by requiring every transaction to be conducted through a licensed dealer involving extensive government paperwork and payment of an undetermined fee.
  • House Bill 282 by Rep. Anchia & House Bill 391 by Rep. Donna Howard (D-Austin) allow public institutions of higher education to “opt-out” of Texas’ campus carry statute, effectively gutting the law the Legislature adopted just last session.
  • House Bill 291 by Rep. Eric Johnson (D-Dallas) & House Bill 466 by Rep. Anchia, respectively, ban open carry by LTCs in the City of Dallas and allow municipalities with populations over 750,000 to “opt-out” of Texas’ open carry law.

 

The deadline for introduction of bills is March 10. As TSRA members, TSRA pledgea to keep you informed as the process moves forward and legislation affecting gun owners and sportsmen is filed and bills are assigned to various committees for hearings.

In the meantime, you can contact your state lawmakers and tell them where you stand on the common sense anti-gun bills listed above:

  • Click on the links to find contact information for your State Representative and State Senator.
  • Bills can be read and tracked at Texas Legislature Online.
  • Check out the flow chart explaining the legislative process on this page (red side-bar link)
  • More information can be found as updated at TSRAPAC.com
    Finally

Members, Please keep your contact information up-to-date so we can find you! Call or email the office to make changes. 512-615-4200. Let us know if you’re moving or are not receiving your magazine. We need to know where you are! Also, thank you for renewing and upgrading your membership. Contact TSRA!

“There are those among us who seek to take care of us in the name of “what’s right.” They are on all sides; part and parcel to all ideas.”

TSRA shares information.

We are vigilant. We get things done.
And as always,
Keep the faith.

Alice Tripp
Legislative Director
Texas State Rifle Association

About the Texas State Rifle Association:

Founded in 1919, the Texas State Rifle Association is the largest firearms and shooting sports organization in Texas with nearly 40,000 members. TSRA is also the largest, award-winning state affiliate of the National Rifle Association and is sanctioned by the Civilian Marksmanship Program. As a part of its public education efforts, the association produces a full-color bimonthly publication, TSRA Sportsman, which updates members on current news, hunter education programs, shooting sports competitions, and important issues effecting their Second Amendment rights. The TSRA also hosts an annual meeting every February that features exciting fund-raising auctions, informative speakers, exhibitors, and other events.

For membership or other information about the Texas State Rifle Association, visit www.TSRA.com or call 512.615.4200.

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Gregg

These so called laws are often proposed and written by people who have Security Staffs and or guards to protect
them. Interesting that they want to restrict the carrying rights of citizens who don’t. Hypocrites !

Colonialgirl

I continue without understanding that four or five Lords with political positions, assert their authority, to disarm the
Honest citizens, instead of making laws that disarm mentally insane, murderous, terrorist, and delinquent
Common, and we have to pay all the same penalty, without being able to exercise our right to have our weapons and
Practice our sports, which are the shot in the polygon and the practice of hunting, which also leaves money to property
Fields that allow the hunting of wildlife.

Jim

Ok Jorge, when the Wall is done you will be put on the south side of it.

Wild Bill

@Mr Logic the 30.06 signs were designed to be “uniform, consistent and recognizable”. There is no evidence that the 30.06 signs were “…designed to be Unintelligible legal gibberish”. If pictograms were more communicative than the written word, we would be using pictograms in all of our communications. The problem with HB246 is that new signs cost money. We should not be telling people how to spend their money or worse forcing them to spend their hard earned money.

Mr. Logic

Umm…I know it’s from a Dem, and so is automatically suspect, but what’s wrong with HB246? The current signs in Texas are designed to be unintelligible legal gibberish. I’ve said for years what we need is pictograms, in order to remove confusion. Even an alien from another planet would understand a pictogram, so what’s the problem with HB246? Am I missing something?

JorgeNorberto Pedace

Continúo sin entender que cuatro o cinco Señores con cargos políticos,hagan valer su autoridad,para desarmar a los
ciudadanos honestos,en lugar de elaborar leyes que desarmen a insanos mentales,asesinos,terroristas,y delincuentes
comunes,y tengamos que pagar todos la misma penalidad,sin poder ejercer nuestro derecho a tener nuestras armas y
practicar nuestros deportes,que son el tiro en el polígono y la práctica de la caza,que además deja dinero a los propie
tarios de campos que permiten la caza de fauna.

Idadho

Que ?
Habla Ingles, por favor.

Colonialgirl

Jorge translated:
I continue without understanding that four or five Lords with political positions, assert their authority, to disarm the
Honest citizens, instead of making laws that disarm mentally insane, murderous, terrorist, and delinquent
Common, and we have to pay all the same penalty, without being able to exercise our right to have our weapons and
Practice our sports, which are the shot in the polygon and the practice of hunting, which also leaves money to property
Fields that allow the hunting of wildlife.