The vote on Governor Cooper's veto
of the Second Amendment Protection Act, H652, will happen tomorrow
morning.
We need you to call and email your
Representative and Senator now to stop this dangerous
bill that endangers school children and teachers, people in emergency
situations, and the general public.
Please call and email your lawmakers today!
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John --
Great news! Thursday, Gov. Cooper vetoed H652,
the Second Amendment Protection Act, saying “the bill
allows guns on school property which threatens the safety of students
and teachers.” We couldn’t agree more.
To protect children, current state law prohibits concealed firearms
at places of worship that have an associated school. North Carolinians
Against Gun Violence believes that this remains sound public policy.
Removing this protection would put school children at increased risk,
even if firearms are still banned on the school part of the
property.
H652 passed the NC House 77-38 and the NC Senate 33-14. See who
voted for the bill in the House here
and in the Senate here.
Please call and email your representative and senator and
tell them to sustain the Governor’s veto. You can find out
who represents you here.
The message is simple: Please vote to sustain Governor
Cooper’s veto of H652, the Second Amendment Protection Act. I am very
concerned for the safety of school children, teachers and for people
in emergency situations. In addition, we need to strengthen, not
weaken, our concealed carry weapons permitting system.
Along with allowing guns at religious places of worship with
schools associated with them, H652 will further damage our state’s
firearm safety laws by:
- weakening NC’s concealed carry weapons permitting system by making
it easier to renew a permit without a firearms safety and training
course. Given that permits last five years, we need to strengthen our
permitting system, not weaken it.
- allowing on-duty emergency medical services personnel working with
law enforcement to carry concealed if they meet certain criteria. We
simply do not need more people with even less training than law
enforcement carrying deadly weapons in emergency situations.
These changes undermine the link between gun safety training and
permitting, and seek to add even more firearms to emergency
situations.
The CDC reports that in 2018, over 1,400 people were killed with
firearms in North Carolina. We need better gun laws to protect all
North Carolinians from gun violence.
H652 goes in the wrong direction by prioritizing easier firearms
access over family safety. Please contact your Senator and
Representative today to ask them to sustain Governor Cooper’s veto of
H652.
Together, we can stop this dangerous bill. Becky
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