For many years, New York State has been a national leader in promoting common sense gun controls. However, as highlighted by the tragedy in Buffalo several weeks ago, the landscape of firearms and related equipment changes rapidly. As such, we passed a set of ten bills at the end of session this year to combat gun violence.
I proudly co-sponsored and voted in favor of each of these ten bills, and all ten have been signed into law by Governor Hochul.
Here are those bills:
•
A10502: Strengthens 2019 Red Flag law by expanding those who can file an Extreme Risk Protection Order (ERPO) to include health care professionals. The bill also requires police and district attorneys to file ERPO petitions in certain circumstances, and requires that firearm licensing decisions consider whether a relevant report has been made by a treating health or mental health practitioner.
• A1023-A: Combats gun trafficking by requiring all state and local law enforcement agencies to submit gun crime information to the National Crime Information Center, the National Integrated Ballistic Information Network, and the National Tracing Center of the Bureau of the Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives. Additionally, the bill requires gun dealers to implement a security plan for securing firearms, prohibits minors from entering certain parts of a gun store without a parent, requires gun dealers to train all employees on firearm transfers, and requires state police to inspect gun dealers every three years.
•
A10428-A: Prohibits all large capacity ammunition feeding devices, eliminating the loophole which allowed firearms possessed before the SAFE Act to be grandfathered in.
•
A10504: Expands the definition of "firearm" to include any weapon that is designed or may be readily converted to expel a projectile by action of an explosive, closing a loophole that allowed certain types of weapons to evade the penal code definition of firearms and rifles.
•
A7926-A: Explores the feasibility of microstamping technology for pistols. This is a novel technology that would imprint a very small identifying mark on ammunition that is fired from a pistol, thus making it easier to determine whose gun was used in a given crime.
•
A10503: Raises the minimum age to purchase a semiautomatic weapon from 18 to 21, and adds a requirement for a license to be obtained prior to purchasing a semiautomatic rifle, such as already is in place for a pistol or revolver.
•
A7865-A: Requires social media networks in New York to provide a clear and concise policy regarding how they would respond to incidents of hateful conduct on their platform and maintain easily accessible mechanisms for reporting hateful conduct on those platforms.
•
A10501: Creates a Task Force on Social Media and Violent Extremism within the Office of the Attorney general to study and investigate the role of social media companies in promoting and facilitating violent extremism and domestic terrorism online.
•
A6716-A: Establishes two new crimes, one defining "making a threat of mass harm" as a class B misdemeanor, and another defining "aggravated making a threat of mass harm" as a class A misdemeanor.
•
A10497: Prohibits the purchase or sale of body vests (defined in state law as a bullet-resistant soft body armor providing threat level I protection, i.e. from three shots from a .38 caliber handgun) to anyone not engaged in an eligible profession (such as law enforcement), and requires such sales to be completed in person.
We also passed a resolution (
K1028) calling on Congress to reinstate the Federal Assault Weapons Ban of 1994. This ban prohibited manufacture of certain semiautomatic firearms and large capacity magazines for use by civilians, but expired in 2004. These types of weapons have been used in mass shootings, such as those that happened in Buffalo and Uvalde last month.
No comments:
Post a Comment