Unwritten firearm policies under the gun as Gov. DeSantis signs preemption bill
Republicans hope local governments think twice about abridging gun rights.
Gov. Ron DeSantis on Friday signed a measure to crack down on local governments creating gun control measures.
Lawmakers last week passed a bill (SB 1884) clarifying that existing preemptions on local firearm and ammunition laws also apply to unwritten rules and policies. The proposal, which the Legislature formally sent to the Governor earlier in the day, will also make clear local governments can’t bypass court cases simply by scrapping gun laws.
State law expressly prohibits a local government from creating an “ordinance, regulation, measure, directive, rule, enactment, order or policy” relating to guns that is more restrictive than state law. The broad list was intended to show it includes unwritten policies, but some courts have sided with cities and counties on unwritten rules.
Rep. Cord Byrd, a Neptune Beach Republican who has carried the issue in the House, said the Legislature needs to shore up the law because of defiant local officials. He cited multiple examples just this year of local governments passing ordinances despite preemption laws in place since 1987. It’s the same reason in 2011 that the Legislature put in penalties for local officials who vote for local ordinances regardless of state law.
“Local governments thumbed their nose at this body, thumbed their nose at this Legislature, and said we do not care,” Byrd said.
In particular, Republicans believe local governments have gotten away with ending their unwritten gun policies when facing lawsuits. The bill will require local governments to pay for attorney fees in those cases.
The House passed the measure 78-39, with Miami Beach Democratic Rep. Mike Grieco being the only member to cross party lines by voting yes with the Republicans. That followed a party-line vote in the Senate earlier that week.
Coral Spring Democratic Rep. Dan Daley, who represents a constituency impacted by the 2018 Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School shooting, sued then-Gov. Rick Scott over Florida’s preemption laws in 2012 and still hopes to bring the case to the Supreme Court.
He said changes to the law approved in 2011 that added fines and potential removal from office for local officials who dare vote for local gun regulations go way too far.
“There is no other preemption in state law that has these grave preemption,” he said.
Rep. Anna Eskamani, an Orlando Democrat whose district includes the Pulse nightclub where 49 were shot and killed in a 2016 mass shooting, said if state lawmakers are afraid to confront the gun lobby on restricting firearms and ammunition, they need to leave that ability to local government.
In the Senate, where Estero Republican Sen. Ray Rodrigues carried the measure, then-Democratic Leader Gary Farmer argued this bill continues the “steady, slow march of preemption.”
But Second Amendment supporters said the state shouldn’t allow infringement of gun rights at all. If measures restricting firearms are considered, it should be done by the state so regulations are consistent throughout Florida.
“We are dealing with a constitutional right,” Byrd said.
He also suggested critics were disingenuous discussing penalties because those already exist in law. His bill only clarifies the scope of preemption.
Last month, the 1st District Court of Appeal rejected a challenge to a 2011 law meant to stiffen penalties for violating the preemption law. A Leon County circuit judge in 2019 found that parts of the law were unconstitutional, spurring Attorney General Ashley Moody and DeSantis to appeal.
That followed a separate court case in March in which the 4th District Court of Appeal sided with the gun-rights group Florida Carry over Broward County, which in 2014 created ordinances to prevent people from carrying weapons at airports and in taxis. In an opinion, Chief Judge Spencer Levine said the ban on “weapons” included guns.
Groups in support of the bill include the National Rifle Association, the Unified Sportsmen of Florida and Gun Owners of America. Meanwhile, the Florida National Organization for Women opposes it.
The law will take effect July 1.
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