As expected almost any gun bill that either hadn't already passed the
Senate in a matching bill, or that was relatively minor, was given a
vote to be "Passed By Indefinitely" (PBI) by the anti-freedom packed
subcommittee.
There was an unusually high Capitol Police presence. I guess Marsh
was worried that the hot tempered antis might cause trouble, but they
behaved themselves. ;-)
A few bills did get passed out (in order of significance):
HB 1191, Delegate Griffith, allows a Circuit Court Clerk to be able to
issue CHPs as long as the judge is OK with it and there are no
problems with the application. This bill should speed up the issuance
of CHPs in some localities
HB 109, Delegate Cole, removes an unused, but egregious law that
allows counties to tax and register handguns when sold by a dealer in
that county. No counties are doing this, but the fact that they could
is a problem
HB 1092, Delegate Crockett-Stark, allows retired law-enforcement
officers to carry everywhere they go
HB 505, Delegate Gilbert, restaurant ban repeal was conformed to the
Senate version of that bill (SB 334). The fact that HB 505 passed out
of subcommittee is really irrelevant since SB 334 is going to be
signed into law anyway
HB 885, Delegate Athey, allows a non-CHP holder to have a gun secured
in a container or compartment in a vehicle or vessel. It was
conformed to the version that passed the Senate (SB 408), making it a
LOCKED container or compartment, and passed out. Again, this bill was
irrelevant since SB 408 is already on its way to the Governor's desk.
And many were voted down:
HB 171, Delegate Pogge, allows someone to be able to keep a gun in
their locked vehicle on private property, prohibiting employers or
landlords from banning such guns. The bill died by 5 to 0, with even
Senator Quayle voting against it.
Those of you who use COMCAST might want to consider calling them to
CANCEL your service. Comcast had a representative there to speak
against your Constitutional right to self-defense by opposing HB 171.
Gun owners should not reward such behavior by remaining loyal
customers. And if you do cancel, be sure to tell them why.
HB 79, Delegate Ware, prohibits Circuit Courts from giving our CHP
applicant information. Only Senator Quayle voted for it. HOWEVER,
this bill did NOT get a fair hearing as promised by Marsh. They let
one anti-self-defense person talk, but cut off the comments the second
I stepped to the microphone. I was not allowed one single word on
that bill nor was anyone else who supported it!
HB 49, Delegate Lingamfelter, repeals one handgun a month. Only
Quayle voted for it. Lingamfelter did a superb job in presenting his
bill
HB 1070, Delegate Athey, allows CHP holders to carry in an emergency
shelter. There was an amendment to add a "battered woman's shelter"
exception before the bill was killed by a 4 to 1 vote. Yeah, let's
disarm a woman whose husband in coming to the shelter to kill her -
brilliant
HB 236, Delegate Janis, allows someone to shoot within one-half mile
of a subdivision if they do so safely
HB 108, Delegate Cole, requires localities which have gun buy-ups to
auction such guns to dealers. As an ex-law enforcement officer I am
embarrassed by some of the baloney spouted by uniformed officers on
this bill. They were either lying or ignorant. One after the other
they said this would "put guns back on the streets." WRONG - the bill
required that only dealers could bid on such guns, meaning the guns
would only be sold to the public after the buyer has passed the NICS
background check. They acted like the bill required the guns to be
sold in a dark alley to a drug dealer. The police also said how they
wanted to destroy those guns. Perhaps they should start by destroying
those on their own hips first, since they don't see the importance of
self-defense. The purpose of law enforcement is not to lobby against
a citizen's right to self-defense, to own guns, to carry guns, or to
buy guns. Those officers were a disgrace to their badges and the
public trust
HB 490, Delegate Lingamfelter, directs the State Police to put
together a plan for lifetime CHPs. Marsh complained that the State
Police didn't have the personnel to work on such a thing with the
budget crunch, Lingamfelter said they had plenty of resources to do
such a project. Funny, when the One Handgun a Month repeal came up, I
told the committee by passing that bill the State Police could save a
lot of money as they would no longer have to waste their time tracking
the number of guns a person purchased. Suddenly Marsh wasn't
concerned about the budget of the State Police, as he then voted to
kill that bill. Once again the antis prove that logic isn't their
strong suit.
--
The real puppet strings are being pulled by Senate Majority Leader -
Senator Saslaw in conjunction with Senator Marsh. In the Washington
Post Saslaw admitted that this whole death star committee was a
childish attempt to "get even" with the House for their subcommittees:
"Va. Senate panel kills House bill that would have repealed gun
purchase limit"
Virginia Politics Blog - Va. Senate panel kills House bill that would have repealed gun purchase limit
[SNIP]
Majority Leader Richard L. Saslaw (D-Fairfax) on Wednesday was not shy
about saying that a special subcommittee in the Senate Courts of
Justice would effectively serve as an elephant graveyard to bury a
host of gun-related bills passed by the Republican-controlled House.
Saslaw also acknowledged that the subcommittee was a FORM OF REVENGE
against its counterpart in the state Capitol and would kill several
bills passed by the entire House just as House subcommittees have
killed bills adopted by the entire Senate.
"We're going to do just like the House did," Saslaw said. ***"If it's
good enough for them, it's good enough for us."*** [PVC: So the ends
justifies the means? Just trample the Rules of the Senate?]
Lawmakers from both parties and both the House and Senate criticized
the escalating tit-for-tat skirmishing by which committees composed of
a handful of lawmakers in one chamber can kill bills passed by large
majorities on the other side of the Capitol. ''
--
BTW, the Governor, to his credit, has been very public in his
criticism of BOTH Houses for letting subcommittees kill bills:
McDonnell criticizes 'kill bill' subcommittees; Senate panel could spike gun bills today | Richmond Times-Dispatch
--
On Monday at 9 AM the full Senate Courts of Justice Committee will
meet and we will see if they will violate their own rules and not hear
the bills that the subcommittee said should be killed.