Haslam 'likely' to sign parking lot guns bill

Thursday, February 28, 2013

photo Tennessee Governor Bill Haslam
Arkansas-Tennessee Live Blog

NASHVILLE, Tenn. - Republican Gov. Bill Haslam is likely to sign into law a bill to allow the state's nearly 400,000 handgun carry permit holders to store firearms in their cars no matter where they are parked, a spokesman said Thursday.

The House earlier in the day voted 72-22 to pass the measure sponsored by Rep. Jeremy Faison, R-Cosby, after rejecting a series of Democratic proposals to maintain business owners' rights to ban weapons on their property and to create exceptions for schools and colleges.

"We have just under 400,000 law abiding citizens who have gone through the necessary process to obtain a handgun carry permit and have proved their worth to carry a gun," Faison said. "The least we can do is allow them to keep this gun locked in their car as they go to work and carry in their daily lives."

Before the vote, Speaker Beth Harwell told Republican colleagues to disregard complaints from "fringe groups" that the guns bill was not expansive enough, seeking to reassure them that the National Rifle Association has endorsed the final version of the measure.

She also acknowledged that business advocates are upset about ceding control over their property but said those objections shouldn't halt the approval of the bill.

"The business community to a large extent is holding their nose and accepting the fact that we are where we are," she said.

The parking-lots gun measure has roiled Republicans in the Legislature for years, and the issue came to a head last year when the NRA and other gun groups blamed a top House Republican for blocking a floor vote on the bill and later helped defeat her in her primary.

Haslam had raised concerns about the measure in the past, especially as it relates property rights and to greater access to guns on campus. But those fears appear to have subsided.

"The governor will review this bill, like he does all bills, when it comes to his desk," David Smith, the governor's press secretary, said in an email. "But he will likely sign it."

Democrats cited statistics gathered by The Associated Press this week that more than 2,000 people have had their carry permits revoked or suspended over the past two calendar years for charges ranging from drug dealing to murder.

Republican Rep. Curry Todd of Collierville is among those who have had permits suspended after pleading guilty last month to drunken driving and gun charges.

Todd, who is best known for sponsoring a 2010 law that allows people with handgun carry permits to be armed in bars and restaurants that serve alcohol, was excused from the floor session before Thursday's vote.

Supporters of the bill say the majority of permit holders shouldn't be penalized for the transgressions of a few.

House Minority Leader Craig Fitzhugh, D-Ripley, stressed the property-rights angle during the 80-minute floor debate.

"We are moving so swiftly and thoughtlessly toward taking away a citizen's right to determine how their property will be used," Fitzhugh said.

The Senate approved its version of the bill 28-5 in early February.

Faison told reporters after the vote that he sees the proposal as enhancing safety at schools.

"When seconds matter, police are minutes away, we need people who have proved they're worth to hold a gun," he said. "And a lot of times they can stop, or impede imminent danger, especially at a school."

Faison acknowledged that the bill would not prevent employers from disciplining workers who violate company policies banning weapons on their property.