Month: April 2019

  • GOAL Alert 2019-2   Legislative alert from Olympia  25 April 2019

    GOAL Alert 2019-2                                                                25 April 2019

    Legislative alert from Olympia

    TEMPORARY HOLD ON BUMP STOCK INFO RELEASE

    IMMEDIATE ACTION REQUIRED

    According to information that we have not been able to confirm at this time, a temporary injunction blocking release of the names and addresses of those who turned in bump stocks to the Washington State Patrol has been imposed by a Washington judge. It’s 0400 here in Indianapolis, where I am attending the NRA convention, and 0200 in Washington, so bear with me please.

    https://mynorthwest.com/1359032/bump-stock-buyback-names-not-released/

    Given my ISP problems and the added difficulties of posting information from a mobile hotspot while on the road in Indianapolis, we are passing along the following information

    Speaker Chopp is contemplating bringing the bill to the floor.

    There are two days left in the legislative session. PLEASE ACT NOW. Contact the following individuals and ask them to PLEASE bring HB 2182 up for a vote.

    Rep. Frank Chopp, Speaker of the House ([email protected]), (360) 786 – 7920

    Rep. Jenkin ([email protected], (360) 786 – 7836

    Rep. Stoner ([email protected], (360) 786 – 7872)

    Rep. Sullivan ([email protected], (360) 786 – 7858

    Rep. Frame ([email protected], (360) 786 – 7814

     

    These are the people that can make it happen

    Please act now, and then get your friends to do the same. If you want politics to go your way grassroots action is how it’s done.

  • GOAL Alert 2019-1 Legislative Alert from Olympia 24 April 2019

    GOAL Alert 2019-1    24 April 2019  Legislative Alert from Olympia

    Last week we reported that a public records request had been submitted to the Washington State Patrol asking for the names and addresses of all of the individuals who turned in “bump stocks” and were compensated by the state. Under the current Public Records Act (RCW 42.56), this information MUST be released.

    An emergency bill has been filed in Olympia to block this action for purposes of public safety.             The bill is HB 2182, was filed by Representatives Shea, Klippert, Boehnke, Kretz, Dufault, Walsh, Orcutt, Young. More than 25 years ago the Washington legislature followed the lead of several other states and restricted access to public records concerning concealed pistol licenses. Why give burglars a heads up of where to go “shopping,” or anti-gun activists the opportunity to publish lists of CPL holders as some have done in other states?

    Bill text can be found here: http://lawfilesext.leg.wa.gov/biennium/2019-20/Pdf/Bills/House%20Bills/2182.pdf

    Again, a reasonable assumption can be made if an individual had a bump stock, he or she also posses a firearm suitable for use with such a device. For those liberals who think this is a reasonable measure, ask them how they would feel about a public records release of the names of all women who received an abortion using public funding as is done in Washington under MEDICAID. Try that and watch the liberal rockets being fired!

    YOU MUST TAKE IMMEDIATE ACTION TODAY IF THIS BILL IS TO MOVE. Again, the bill is HB 2182. It is imperative you contact YOUR state legislators today and ask them to support the bill. Your legislator is a liberal? Use the abortion example I cited above as an argument.

    Contact information for your legislators may be found at https://app.leg.wa.gov/DistrictFinder/   When you insert your address, a box will pop up with links to your state Senator and two state Representatives. Or you can do it the old fashioned way and look in the “blue” Government pages in your telephone directory.

    Timing is critical. One report indicates the WSP intends to release the information as wearly as tomorrow, Friday, even before the mandatory release deadline.

    Will Democrat leadership in both the House and Senate act, and will Governor Inslee sign an emergency bill?

  • GOAL Post 2019-15, Legislative Update from Olympia 19 April 2019

    GOAL Post                                                                      2019-15

    Legislative Update from Olympia                                        19 April 2019

     

    RALLY FOR YOUR RIGHTS

    BILLS PASS, ONE DIES

    CONCURRENCE VOTES

    ONE MORE WEEK

    SPECIAL SESSION LOOMS

    BUMP STOCK WARNING

    LATE DISSEMINATION

    ON THE ROAD

     

    A pro-gun “Rally for your Rights” will be held on the Capitol Campus on Saturday, 27 March at 12 noon.  A little late in the session, but still an opportunity to show your support.  It IS on a Saturday.  Try to make it and show them the gun lobby is not a paper tiger..

    Several bills passed by the end of the second chamber cut-off on (more…)

  • GOAL Post 2019-14, Legislative Update from Olympia 12 April 2019

    GOAL Post 2019-14
    Legislative Update from Olympia 12 April 2019

    BILLS PASS SECOND CHAMBER
    CONFERENCE COMMITTEE FOR MOST
    CHAMBER CUT-OFF NEXT WEDNESDAY, 17 APRIL

    The House passed SBs 5181 (firearms/mental health) and 5205 (firearms/incompetence, both with amendments. The Senate passed HB 1225 (firearms/domestic violence) with amendments. All three bills await a concurrence vote (for the amendment) or go to a conference committee to iron out differences, where SB 5508 CPL background checks) still sits.. HB 1949 (firearm background checks) is on its way to the Governor. HBs 1465 (handgun delivery), 1739 (undetectable/untraceable firearms), 1786 (firearms/protective orders) and 1934 (military CPL renewal) and SB 5782 (spring blade knives) still await a floor vote. All five bills are on their chamber floor calendar, so a vote is possible in the next few days.

    Next Wednesday (more…)

  • GOAL Post 2019-13, Legislative Update from Olympia 5 April 2019

    GOAL Post 2019-13
    Legislative Update from Olympia 5 April 2019

    POLICY COMMITTEE CUT-OFF; BILLS MOVE, BILLS DIE
    ACTION SHIFTS ONCE AGAIN TO CHAMBER FLOORS
    17 APRIL CHAMBER CUT-OFF, 28 APRIL SINE DIE

    The legislature is moving into the final leg of its 105 day/15 week regular session. Just over three weeks left. The primary focus of the long session in odd-numbered years is supposed to be development and adoption of the biennial budget, Whether a budget agreement will be reached or a special session will be called is hard to say right now. Both the House and Senate have passed budget bills, but the bills are $750 MILLION apart – in new spending only! The overall biennial budget runs over $52 BILLION. Now to guns… (more…)