Author Archives: Evan (admin)

Fulton County taking aim at gun law

Fulton County’s supervisors have taken a strong position against the state’s new gun control regulations.

During a regular board meeting Monday, the supervisors discussed the state’s new gun control law — Safe Act — recently enacted by the state Legislature, and signed by Gov. Cuomo.

Resolution No. 32 endorsing the position of the New York State Sheriff’s Association expressing concern about Safe Act was unanimously passed.

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Town of Marilla resolution opposing the NY SAFE act

Passed unanimously February 14th 2013

Motion: Councilman Handley moved, seconded by Councilman Darrow to approve the following resolution for the New York State Safe Act:

WHEREAS, The Town of Marilla located in the East Section of Erie County in the State of New York objects to the infringement of the 2nd Amendment of the Constitution of the United States of America by the governing body of New York State , and

WHEREAS, On Monday January 14th, 2013 the rights under the second Amendment of our Constitution was infringed upon without due process, and

WHERAS, The Gun control Bill (S.2230) known as NY SAFE Act was rushed through the Senate & Assembly without a single Public hearing or input from the various Law enforcement agency located around our State, and

WHEREAS, Even the State lawmakers did not have time to review the bill as presented leaving questions about implementation and regulation of this new law, and

WHEREAS, This law should focus on increasing penalties for criminals who use firearms to harm and threaten law abiding citizens and address the issues of mental illness related to violence, and

WHEREAS, The residents of the Town of Marilla realize that the NY SAFE Act, gun control law must be repealed and must replace the restrictive parts of the enacted law, and

NOW THEREFORE BE IT RESOLVED, that The Town Board of the Town of Marilla urgently asks Governor Andrew M. Cuomo & the Legislative leaders to suspend this law as soon as possible and to look at all the aspects of Gun control using the proper legal procedure to bring about a law that will address gun control in a more logical manner, focusing on the real issue related to gun control- a law that will strengthen the effect on public safety and not infringe upon our constitutional rights.

RESOLVED, that a certified copy of this resolution be forwarded to: Honorable Governor Andrew M. Cuomo, Honorable Senate Majority Leader Dean Skelos , Majority Leader of Independent Democratic Caucus Jeff Klein, Honorable Senate Minority Leader John Sampson, Honorable Speaker of the Assembly Sheldon Silver , Honorable Leader of the Assembly Ron Canestrari, Honorable Minority Leader of the Assembly Brian Kolb, and the Western New York Delegation and Erie County Legislators

Roll Call Vote:
Councilwoman Spanitz – Aye Councilwoman Ackerman – Aye
Councilman Handley – Aye Councilman Darrow – Aye
Supervisor Gertz – Aye
Motion Carried.

Town of Harrisburg resolution opposing NY SAFE

Resolution was adopted at the regular February Town Board meeting of the Town of Harrisburg, Lewis County, NY on 2/14/2013

TOWN OF HARRISBURG

RESOLUTION NO. _____ – 2013

RESOLUTION OPPOSING THE NEW YORK STATE SECURE AMMUNITION AND FIREARMS ENFORCEMENT ACT (S.A.F.E.) ACT OF 2013

Introduced by Supervisor Stephen N. Bernat

WHEREAS, the Second Amendment to the Constitution of the United States states: “…the right of the people to keep and bear Arms, shall not be infringed.”; and

WHEREAS, Article II, Section 4 of the Civil Rights Law of the State of New York states: “…the right of the people to keep and bear arms cannot be infringed.”; and

WHEREAS, the Declaration of Independence of the United States of America acknowledges the human right of self defense when it states: “…all men are created equal, that they are endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable Rights, that among these are Life, Liberty and the pursuit of Happiness.”; and

WHEREAS, the S.A.F.E. Act does infringe upon the right of the people of the State of New York to peacefully enjoy the right to keep and bear arms for hobby, sport, hunting and personal protection; and

WHEREAS, Article III, Section 14 of the Constitution of the State of New York states: “No bill shall be passed or become a law unless it shall have been printed and upon the desks of the members, in its final form, at least three calendar legislative days prior to its final passage, unless the governor, or the acting governor, shall have certified, under his or her hand and the seal of the state, the facts which in his or her opinion necessitate an immediate vote thereon…”; and

WHEREAS, the facts did not necessitate an immediate vote on this legislation and thus the Governor’s order of necessity suggests an attempt to bypass the constitutional process; and

WHEREAS, the Senate Leadership failed to accept the responsibility to act as a check and balance on the Governor’s unnecessary use of the message of necessity; and

WHEREAS, the S.A.F.E. act was rushed through the Senate with as little as 20 minutes for Senators to review the bill, without a single public hearing, passed by the Assembly and signed into law less than 24 hours after first being presented, giving no opportunity for constituents to comment on the bill and no time for proper consideration of the implications of its provisions; and

WHEREAS, this legislation creates an environment in the State which is hostile to gun manufacture and ownership; and

WHEREAS, ownership of firearms is a valued tradition in New York State which must remain available to all honest citizens; and

WHEREAS, the new definition of “assault weapon” is so broad, based upon one arbitrary feature, as to prevent the possession of many firearms that are legitimately used for hunting, target shooting and self defense; and

WHEREAS, these newly defined “assault weapons” were used in only 5 out of 769 homicides in New York State last year and FBI reports show that hammers and clubs are the weapon of choice in more deaths than rifles and shotguns; and

WHEREAS, the 7 round limit on magazine capacity is arbitrary and criminalizes the sale, use and intended function of even most semiautomatic .22 caliber rimfire rifles and pistols including those held within a law-abiding citizen’s own home; and

WHEREAS, requiring background checks for ammunition purchases constitutes an unnecessary burden on sportsmen and will create an artificially inflated cost of ammunition and limit availability to ordinary citizens while having absolutely no effect on crime rates; and

WHEREAS, tragic mass killings invariably occur in gun-free zones where dangerously mentally ill and other lawless perpetrators feel safe; and

WHEREAS, law-abiding citizens are not and have not been the source of criminal activity; and

WHEREAS, criminals by definition do not obey the law and will continue to use whatever firearm and magazine they want; and

WHEREAS, this legislation is so fundamentally flawed due to its rushed drafting and lack of proper deliberation that now all semiautomatic pistols having a detachable magazine and a pistol grip are classified as assault weapons, police cannot legally carry more than 7 rounds in their weapons and police responding to an incident at a school cannot legally bring their weapons with them; and

WHEREAS, this legislation fails to offer any meaningful solutions to the epidemic of gun violence, making criminals more SAFE and honest citizens less SAFE.

Now, Therefore, BE IT RESOLVED as follows:

RESOLVED, that the Town Board of the Town of Harrisburg, Lewis County, New York does hereby oppose the enactment of the New York State Secure Ammunition and Firearms Enforcement Act of 2013 because it fundamentally alters or abridges the right to keep and bear arms without addressing the problems of gun violence; and be it further

RESOLVED, that the Town Board of the Town of Harrisburg, Lewis County, New York does hereby call upon the New York State Legislature and the Governor to repeal, set aside and annul this ill conceived and poorly drafted statute which abridges the rights of law abiding citizens of the State of New York; and be it further

RESOLVED, that the Town Board of the Town of Harrisburg, Lewis County, New York does hereby call upon the New York State Legislature to conduct hearings where the public is afforded the right to participate in the legislative process where the issue of gun violence and the treatment of the dangerously mentally ill might actually produce meaningful results; and be it further

RESOLVED, that certified copies of this Resolution shall be forwarded to the Governor of the State of New York, Senator Joseph Griffo, Assemblyman Kenneth Blankenbush and the New York State Association of Towns.

 

Moved by Councilman__Nevills____, seconded by Councilman__Snyder_____

 

ADOPTED: VOTE – AYES__4___ NAYS__0___ ABSENT__1___

February 14, 2013

Town of Callicoon gun resolution draws pushback

Like other town boards across the state, the board of the Town of Callicoon considered and passed a resolution opposing the New York Secure Ammunition and Firearms Enforcement Act of 2013 (SAFE Act) passed by the state legislature and signed by Governor Andrew Cuomo in the wake of the killing of school children at Sandy Hook Elementary School in Connecticut.

and

That sparked a sharp admonition from Dr. Ken Hilton, former superintendent of the Sullivan West School District, who said, “I’m shocked at the resolution you just approved. I’m speaking as a former member of the National Rifle Association, licensed by them as a rifle/shotgun instructor. Did you read the words of that resolution? You know that all constitutional rights have limitations. The First Amendment doesn’t allow you to go into a crowded theater and yell fire.”

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Town of Lapeer resolution calling for repeal of the NY SAFE act

WHEREAS, the Right of the People to Keep and Bear Arms is guaranteed as an Individual Right under the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution and under the Constitution of the State of New York, and;

WHEREAS, the Right of the People to Keep and Bear Arms for defense of Life, Liberty, and Property is regarded as an Inalienable Right by the People of the Town of Lapeer, New York, and:

WHEREAS, the People of the Town of Lapeer, New York, derive economic benefit and recreation from all safe forms of firearms conducted within the Town of Lapeer using all types of firearms allowable under the United States Constitution and the Constitution & the State of New York, and;

WHEREAS, the Town of Lapeer Board, being elected to represent the People of the Town of Lapeer and being duly sworn by their Oath of Office to uphold the United States Constitution and the Constitution of the State of New York, and;

WHEREAS, the New York Assembly and the New York Senate, being elected by the People of the State of New York and being duly sworn by their Oath of Office to uphold the United States Constitution and the Constitution of the State of New York, and;

WHEREAS, the legislation passed by the New York State Legislature and signed by the Governor on January 15 infringes upon the Right to Keep and Bear Arms and bans the possession and use of firearms now employed by individual citizens of the Town of Lapeer, New York, for defense of Life, Liberty and Property and bans the possession and use of firearms now legally owned for safe forms of firearms conducted within the Town of Lapeer, New York;

NOW, THEREFORE, BE IT AND HEREBY RESOLVED that the Town of Lapeer’s Town Board, hereby calls for the repeal of the New York Secure Ammunition and Firearms Enforcement Act of 2013 and declares that such legislation infringes upon the Right of the People to keep and bear arms, thereby considers such an act an over reach of legislative authority and is unconstitutional.

Passed unanimously.

Town of Cochecton resolution opposing the NY SAFE act

RESOLUTION # 26 – KEEP AND BEAR ARMS SECOND AMENDMENT

On motion of Councilperson Grund, seconded by Councilperson Story, the following resolution was,

WHEREAS, the Right of the People to Keep and Bear Arms is guaranteed as an individual Right under the Second Amendment of the United States Constitution of the State of New York, and

WHEREAS, the Right of the People to Keep and Bear Arms for the defense of Life Liberty, and Property is regarded as an inalienable Right by the Town of Cochecton, Sullivan County, New York, and

WHEREAS, the Cochecton Town Board, being elected to represent the People of Cochecton and being duly sworn by their Oath of Office to uphold the United States Constitution of the State of New York, and

WHEREAS, the New York State Assembly and New York State Senate, being elected by the People of the State of New York and being duly sworn by their Oath of Office to uphold the United States Constitution and the Constitution of the State of New York, and

WHEREAS, legislation passed by the New York Assembly and Senate infringes on the Right to Keep and Bear Arms and would ban the possession and use of firearms now employed by individual citizens of the Town of Cochecton, for defense of Life, Liberty, and Property and would ban the possession and use of firearms now employed for safe forms of firearm recreation, hunting and shooting conducted with the Town of Cochecton, Sullivan County, New York, and

WHEREAS, the Town of Cochecton Board believes there are many other less intrusive means available, other than rash confusing, and inarticulately drafted firearm laws that would effectively, control, manage and reduce violence in our society, such as, mental health reforms, anti-bullying programs for schools, enforcement of existing laws to the fullest extent possible, and proper psychological counseling for those in need or who request it, and

NOW, THEREFORE, IT BE AND IS HEREBY RESOLVED that the Cochecton Town Board does hereby oppose the enactment of any legislation that would infringe upon the Right of the People to keep and bear arms and consider such laws to be unnecessary and beyond lawful legislative authority granted to our State representatives, as there is no documented correlation between gun control measures and crime reduction.

BE IT FURTHER RESOLVED that a copy of this resolution be sent to Governor Cuomo, Senator John Bonacic, and Assemblywoman Aileen Gunther

ADOPTED: AYES: 4 NAYS: 1 Councilperson Richardson
Supervisor Maas
Councilpersons: Grund, Schulman and Story

Town of Lisbon resolution opposing NY SAFE act

Passed unanimously February 13th 2013

Town of Lisbon resolution opposing NY SAFE Act by Evan Hempel

Fulton County resolution opposing NY SAFE act.

Passed 18-0 with 2 absent.

Fulton County Resolution02182013_0000

Cattaraugus County resolution opposing NY SAFE bill

Passed on February 13th unanimously.

Cattaraugus Legislature Minutes 20130213 by Evan Hempel

Orleans County resolution opposing the NY SAFE Act

The following resolution was passed by the Orleans County Legislature on February 13, 2013

RESOLUTION NO. 82-213

OPPOSING THE PROCESS OF ENACTMENT AND CERTAIN PROVISIONS CONTAINED WITHIN THE NEW YORK SAFE ACT

WHEREAS, the right of the people to keep and bear arms is guaranteed as an individual right under the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution; and

WHEREAS, the right of the people to keep and bear arms for defense of life, liberty, and property is regarded as an inalienable right by the people of Orleans County; and

WHEREAS, the lawful ownership of firearms is, and has been, a valued tradition in Orleans County, and the rights protected by the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution are exercised by many of our residents; and

WHEREAS, the people of Orleans County derive economic and environmental benefits from all safe forms of recreation involving firearms, including, but not limited to, hunting and target shooting while utilizing all types of firearms available under the Constitution of the United States; and

WHEREAS, members of the Orleans County Legislature, being elected to represent the people of Orleans County, are duly sworn by their oath of office to uphold the Constitution of the United States; and

WHEREAS, members of the New York State Assembly and the New York State Senate, being elected by the people of New York State, are duly sworn by their oath of office to uphold the Constitution of the United States; and

WHEREAS, the enactment of the NY SAFE Act (Chapter 1 of the Laws of 2013) has engendered significant controversy over both the process by which it was enacted and certain provisions contained within it; and

WHEREAS, it is our understanding that many State Legislators had less than an hour to read the legislation, which contained approximately twenty-five thousand words, before being forced to vote on it; and

WHEREAS, having reviewed the legislation and time constraints, it is our conclusion that there is no possible way any individual could have read the entire bill and understood its full implications prior to voting on it; and

WHEREAS, our State Legislators most certainly could not have had the time to request, and receive, the input of their constituents regarding this matter; and

WHEREAS, seeking and considering, such public input is a standard to which we hold ourselves in the Orleans County Legislature; and

WHEREAS, this legislation has 60 sections, of which only three take effect immediately; and

WHEREAS, in our opinion, there was no reason for the Governor to use a message of necessity to bring this bill to vote immediately and bypass the three day maturing process for all legislation; and

WHEREAS, the mishandling of the process in crafting the NY SAFE Act resulted in complex policy changes, many of which have been left up to interpretation, and are confusing even to the State Legislators who voted on them, and the law enforcement officials who are required to enforce and explain them; and

WHEREAS, requiring law-abiding gun owners to verify ownership of certain types of firearms every five years, in addition to registering them on their permits, which now also must be renewed every 5 years, does not increase the safety of the public and is unnecessarily burdensome to the residents of New York State; and

WHEREAS, there will be a significant financial impact due to the approximately 5,300 Orleans County permits that will have to be renewed requiring additional manpower and computer systems; and

WHEREAS, this legislation prohibits the sale of firearm magazines with a capacity larger than seven rounds; and

WHEREAS, those firearm magazines with a capacity larger than seven rounds, which are authorized to be retained by existing owners, may only be loaded with seven rounds and eventually must be permanently altered to only accept seven rounds or be disposed of, thus constituting a seizure of legally owned personal property with no provision for compensation; and

WHEREAS, few or no low capacity (7 rounds or less) magazines currently exist for many of the firearms commonly possessed by law-abiding residents of New York State; and

WHEREAS, limiting the number of rounds to seven versus ten is arbitrary and capricious, has no correlation to public safety, unfairly burdens law-abiding gun owners, and puts an undue burden on gun manufacturers to retool their manufacturing plants; and

WHEREAS, the only persons who will comply with the new high-capacity magazine ban are law-abiding citizens, leaving the same high-capacity magazines in the hands of those who choose not to obey the law; and

WHEREAS, requiring documentation of all ammunition sales in New York State, as provided for in this legislation, is a significant unfunded mandate on business; and

WHEREAS, the New York State Combined Ballistic Identification System, which wasted $44 million in taxpayer money and resulted in zero convictions, illustrates the propensity of government to waste taxpayer resources when legislation is not properly reviewed; and

WHEREAS, Governor Cuomo has proposed spending $36 million dollars in his 2013-2014 Executive budget for the implementation of the NY SAFE Act at a time when New York State residents are crying out for tax relief; and

WHEREAS, this legislation severely impacts the possession and use of firearms now employed by the residents of Orleans County for defense of life, liberty, and property; and

WHEREAS, this legislation severely impacts the possession and use of firearms now employed for safe forms of recreation including, but not limited to, hunting and target shooting; and

WHEREAS, while there are some areas of the legislation that the Orleans County Legislature finds encouraging, such as addressing glaring shortcomings in the mental health system, the strengthening of Kendra’s Law and Mark’s law, as well as privacy protections for certain pistol permit holders, by-and-large, we find the legislation does little more than negatively impact lawful gun ownership; and

WHEREAS, this legislation fails to offer any meaningful solutions to gun violence and places increased burdens where they do not belong, squarely on the backs of law-abiding citizens; and

WHEREAS, this legislation effectively turns countless New York State law-abiding gun owners into criminals; and

WHEREAS, the manner in which this legislation was brought forward for vote in the State Legislature is deeply disturbing to the Orleans County Legislature; now, therefore be it

RESOLVED, that the Orleans County Legislature does hereby oppose, and request the repeal of, any legislation, including the sections within the NY SAFE Act (Chapter1 of the Laws of 2013), which infringe upon the right of the people to keep and bear arms; and be it

FURTHER RESOLVED, that the Orleans County Legislature considers such laws to be unnecessary and beyond lawful legislative authority granted to our State representatives; and be it

FURTHER RESOLVED, that the Orleans County Legislature strongly encourages members of the New York State Legislature to hold public hearings to address the issue of gun violence in a way that will produce meaningful results; and be it

FURTHER RESOLVED, that the Orleans County Legislature requests the members of the New York State Senate and Assembly who represent all, or part of, Orleans County to reply, in writing, with their views on, and actions taken, in support of, or opposition to, the NY SAFE Act; and be it

FURTHER RESOLVED, that a copy of this resolution be sent to President Barack Obama, Vice President Joseph Biden, Governor Andrew Cuomo, Senator Charles Schumer, Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, Congressman Chris Collins, New York State Senator George Maziarz, Assembly Speaker Sheldon Silver, New York State Assembly members Steve Hawley and Jane Corwin, NYSAC, InterCounty of Western New York and all other deemed necessary and proper.

Moved, Johnson; second, Unanimous.

Adopted.  6 ayes; 0 nays;1 absent, Allport.