FROM:
GOAL [goalwa@cox.net] (Joe Waldron)
TO:
undisclosed-recipients
SENT:
Fri 3/8/2013 7:45 PM
SUBJECT:
GOAL Post 2013-8
GOAL
Post 2013-8
Legislative
Update from Olympia 8 March 2013
- CHAMBER CUT-OFF THIS COMING WEDNESDAY
- SSB 5282 PASSES SENATE
- LITTLE OVERT ACTIVITY ON BILLS
- BACKROOM ACTION
- VOTE ON SJM 8006
At
5 p.m. next Wednesday, all bills that have not passed out of their respective
chamber (House bills out of the House, Senate bills out of the Senate) will die
for the session. Not all bills get a
vote. The clock typically runs out on
several of them before they reach the chamber floor. Especially bills that are considered
controversial, and that leadership doesn't feel they have sufficient votes to
pass (50 "aye" votes in the House, 25 in the Senate) -- why waste the
chamber's time when bills are stacked up?
SSB
5282 (Carrell (R-289)) passed the Senate today on a unanimous vote. SSB 5282 requires improved exchange of
information between the Department of Social and Health Services (DSHS) and the
Washington State Patrol regarding individuals who lost their eligibility to
possess a firearm due to some forms of commitment.
Of
the other five firearm-related bills we're still tracking, there has been
little visible activity. As they sit in
their respective Rules Committee awaiting their turn for a vote, there is
frequently back room action taking place.
This is the time floor amendments are drafted, often to appease bill
opponents and try to muster enough votes for the bill to pass. Recall Senator Feinstein's statement in a 60
Minutes interview back in 1994 on the Clinton "assault weapon" ban:
"If I could have gotten the votes, I'd ban them all." So as the chamber deadline approaches,
there's a lot of negotiating and arm-twisting going on in the back rooms.
Specifically
with regard to SHB 1588, there have been at least two amended versions offered
internally, the first in an attempt to appease gun owners, the second backing
AWAY from that version when the Washington Association of Sheriffs and Police
Chiefs (WASPC) objected. (A side note
about WASPC: there are 39 county
sheriffs who are members of WASPC, but many times that number of city police
chiefs. The police chiefs, who are
dependent on mayors and city councils for their jobs, usually drive WASPC's
legislative agenda.)
The
principal sticking point with 1588 is record retention -- gun
registration. Another issue from our
standpoint is the provision that would waive the collection of sales tax for
private sales conducted via FFLs. That
provision was put in a separate section of the bill, making it a prime target
for veto by Governor Inslee. (Another
side note: Before he was Governor, Jay
Inslee was a Congressman representing the 1st Congressional District in the
north Seattle suburbs. Before he was the
1st District Congressman, he was Congressman in the 4th Congressional District,
central Washington from the Canadian border to the Oregon border. In 1994, Jay Inslee cast a vote FOR the
Clinton "assault weapon" ban -- by some reports the deciding
vote. He was fired by his constituents
in the 1994 elections. How do you think
Governor Inlsee feels about gun owners?)
Following
next Wednesday's chamber cut-off, the focus shift to the opposite chamber, when
House bills go through the Senate and Senate bills through the House. It's Yogi Berra's deja vu all over
again: policy committee hearings, fiscal
committee action if the bill warrants it, then into Rules awaiting a chamber
floor vote.
SJM
(Senate Joint Memorial) 8006 passed the Senate today on a 40-8 vote. This is the watered down version of SB 5660
that died in committee two weeks ago,
It recommends (vice mandates) adoption of the NRA's "Eddie
Eagle" gun avoidance program for young children. Eddie Eagle has been presented to millions of
children across the United States and is credited with saving several
lives. Amazingly 8 Senators voted
AGAINST this bill. A similarly-worded memorial
was passed by the legislature UNANIMOUSLY fifteen years ago.
BILL
STATUS:
The
following bills remain under consideration in the 2013 session
Bill
#
|
Subject
|
Sponsor
|
Status
|
SHB
1096
|
Juvi
illegal firearm possession
|
Hurst
(D-31)
|
H.
Rules
|
SHB
1383
|
Stalking
protection orders
|
Goodman
(D-45)
|
H.
Rules
|
SHB
1588
|
Background
checks
|
Pedersen
(D-43)
|
H.
Rules
|
SHB
1612
|
Firearm
offender registry
|
Hope
(R-44)
|
H.
Rules
|
SHB
1839
|
Background
checks
|
Goodman
(D-45)
|
H.
Rules
|
SHB
1840
|
Firearms/restraining
orders
|
Goodman
(D-45)
|
H.
Rules
|
SSB
5282
|
DSHS/WSP
info exchange
|
Carrell
(R-28)
|
Passed
Senate
|
SSB
5452
|
Stalking
protection orders
|
Conway
(D-
|
S.
Rules
|
SB
5831
|
Bans
double tax on clay pigeons
|
Rivers
(R-18)
|
S.
Rules
|
Key
to abbreviations: SB = Senate Bill, HB =
House Bill, Jud = Judiciary, L&J = Law & Justice, HS&C = Human
Services & Corrections, Trans = Transportation, Approp = Appropriations,
Early Learn = Early Learning and K-12 Education, W&M = Ways & Means
GOAL
POSITION ON BILLS
HB
1096 CONCERNS
HB
1383 CONCERNS
HB
1588 OPPOSE
HB
1612 CONCERNS
HB
1839 SUPPORT
HB
1840 OPPOSE
SB
5282 SUPPORT
SB
5452 CONCERNS
SB
5831 SUPPORT
HEARING(S)
SCHEDULED: None
LEGISLATIVE
HOT LINE: You may reach your
Representatives and Senator by calling the Legislative Hotline at
1-800-562-6000. Toll free!!! The hearing impaired may obtain TDD access at
1-800-635-9993. Also toll free!!!
1-800-562-6000 TDD 1-800-635-9993
OTHER
DATA: Copies of pending legislation
(bills), legislative schedules and other information are available on the
legislature's web site at "www.leg.wa.gov". Bills are available in Acrobat (.pdf)
format. You may download a free version
of Adobe Acrobat Reader from Adobe's web site (http://www.adobe.com). You may also obtain hard copy bills,
initiatives, etc, in the mail from the Legislative Bill Room FREE OF CHARGE by
calling 1-360-786-7573. Copies of bills
may also be ordered toll free by calling the Legislative Hotline at (800)
562-6000. You may also hear floor and
committee hearing action live at http://www.tvw.org/ (you need
"RealAudio" to do this, available free at the TVW web site).
By
reading the House and Senate "bill reports" (hbr, sbr) for each bill,
you can see how individual committee members voted. By reading the "roll call" for each
bill, you can see how the entire House or Senate voted on any bill. The beauty of the web site is that ALL this
information is available, on line, to any citizen.
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Upcoming
WAC gun show(s):
Puyallup 23-24 March
Monroe 6-7 April
"The
right of the individual citizen to bear arms in defense of himself, or the
state, shall not be impaired, but nothing in this section shall be construed as
authorizing individuals or corporations to organize, maintain or employ an
armed body of men."
Article
1, Section 24
Constitution
of the State of Washington
Copyright
2013 Gun Owners Action League of WA
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