A6 BAKER CITY HERALD • SATURDAY, AUGUST 13, 2022 OREGON Opponents line up against Oregon gun control proposal BY JOHN TILLMAN East Oregonian PENDLETON — A mea- sure requiring a permit, re- porting of application data and safety training to buy a firearm in Oregon is set to ap- pear on the November ballot. And gun rights proponents are taking stances against it. Measure 114 also would outlaw magazines holding more than 10 cartridges. “First and foremost, I hope voters will take the time to educate themselves on the measure and review it line by line,” Umatilla County Sheriff Terry Rowan said. “Measure 110 might not have passed had people studied it. Propo- nents sold it as breaking the cycle of addiction, but didn’t focus on legalizing the most dangerous drugs, so that ad- dicts would no longer be compelled to seek treatment. Similarly, Measure 114 advo- cates focus on stopping gun violence, but the public re- ally needs to evaluate its lan- guage.” The proposition, titled “Changes to Gun Ownership and Purchase Requirements Initiative,” is one of the strict- est gun control measures ever proposed in the nation, ac- cording to opponents. “(Measure 114) will virtu- ally end the sale of firearms in (the state),” Oregon Fire- arms Federation Executive Director Kevin Starrett said on July 26. “Where do you suppose all the smaller towns who rely on private gun clubs for training are going to go for the live fire portion of the class? How often will they provide it? What costs will be created? How do those in- creased costs and barriers af- fect Black folks in inner-city Portland?” Measure 114 would re- quire a permit to obtain any firearm, and it would outlaw magazines capable of holding more than 10 rounds. If the measure passes, it would ban some commonly used pump shotguns because their ca- pacity can exceed that limit. Further, Oregon State Police would be required to maintain a searchable public database of all permit applications. Rowan also said he was con- vinced the measure is a direct violation of the U.S. Constitu- tion’s Second Amendment. “It could take a couple of years before the Supreme Court hears a challenge,” Rowan noted. “While wait- ing, Oregonians would be de- prived of their right to self-de- fense. In the meantime, those with ill intentions are still go- ing to get a gun, ignoring the provisions for background checks and safety training.” The $65 fee associated with the measure won’t cover even half of the cost of implement- ing it, Rowan said. The Ore- gon State Sheriffs’ Association estimated the first year cost at $40 million. The OSSA op- poses the measure, and the Oregon Association Chiefs of Police might join them, he commented. “If a citizen of Pendleton needs a gun for self-defense, who is going to provide the services required by the mea- sure?” Rowan asked. “City police forces lack the time, money and staff. The un- funded, mandated safe han- dling and storage instruction is an attempt to stall people in purchasing a firearm.” Rowan said he prefers ap- plying stricter penalties on and enforcement of firearms laws already on the books. “Again, it’s all in how the picture is painted,” he con- cluded. “If it’s pitched as stop- ping gun violence, then voters might buy into it. Opponents must emphasize education on the measure’s impact. High-capacity magazines are common for legitimate pur- poses. I hope voters don’t re- peat the errors of Measure 110, but will realize what else is in it.” The initiative does not es- timate the cost or analyze its impact on small local police departments. The Oregon State Sheriffs’ Association estimated even if a person could somehow complete the required train- ing, the permitting process could cost sheriffs almost $40 million annually. But nothing in the measure provides any funding, and the fees included would not come close to cov- Kathy Aney/East Oregonian, File Clay Winton, owner of Crosshair Customs in Baker City, chats with customers March 11, 2018, at the Pend- leton Gun Show. The passage of Measure 114 on the November ballot in Oregon would make obtaining a gun more difficult and outlaw magazines that hold more than 10 rounds. ering the costs. “Numerous police depart- ments and sheriff’s offices have agreed that complying with this measure will either be exorbitantly expensive or impossible,” Starrett said. “None have said they will be offering the training required to apply for the permit to pur- chase, which sheriffs and local police will be tasked with ad- ministering.” Mass shootings boost initiative drive In early May, the almost all-volunteer Initiative Peti- tion 17 to get the proposals on the ballot had gathered less than a third of the required signatures, Oregon Public Broadcasting reported. But that changed dramatically af- ter shootings in Buffalo, New York, and Uvalde, Texas. Volunteers and donations poured in, and the number of signatures ballooned, accord- ing to OPB. By late June, orga- nizers said they had collected sufficient signatures to get the measure on the ballot. Yet they continued the effort to ensure there were enough, in case the Oregon Secretary of State dis- qualified some. State officials check and validate every sig- nature. The initiative would close the so-called Charleston loop- hole by requiring people to pass a background check be- fore buying a gun, The Orego- nian reported in May. Under current federal law, firearms dealers can sell guns without a completed back- ground check if it takes longer than three business days, mea- sure proponents said. That’s how the gunman in the 2015 Charleston African Methodist Episcopal Church mass shoot- ing bought the Glock 41 .45 cal. pistol with which he killed nine parishioners. Critics contend measure threatens legal gun owners The measure would enact a law requiring a permit issued by a local law enforcement agency to purchase any fire- arm. Applicants would have to pay a fee, be fingerprinted, complete safety training, and pass a criminal background check. In addition, the applicant must complete a hands-on demonstration of basic fire- arms handling to qualify. “In order to obtain the permit, an applicant would have to show up with a fire- arm to demonstrate the abil- ity to load, fire, unload, and store the firearm,” William- son, a Salem trial attorney specializing in gun law, said. “But you can’t get a firearm without the permit. And un- der Oregon’s highly restric- tive gun storage laws, no one can legally loan a firearm to another. That creates an im- passable barrier.” H.K. Kahng of Portland served on five-person com- mittee to write the measure 500-word explanatory state- ment to appear in the voters’ guide this fall. Kahng, an en- gineer and National Rifle As- sociation firearms instructor, said the permit and training programs create an unfunded mandate with no enforcement measures. “The measure calls upon the Oregon State Police to come up with these (permit- ting and training) programs, but there’s no consequence if they don’t, and there’s no time frame for coming up with them,” Kahng said during the committee’s July 26 meeting. Williamson also expressed concerns the permit system grants the Oregon State Police “unfettered authority” to in- quire into all manner of per- sonal information of the appli- cant and to deny the applicant the permit for any reason or for simply failing to cooperate. “No information is off lim- its,” he claimed. “The intro- duction of highly subjective criteria in (the measure) al- lows the government signifi- cant authority to intrude into the private lives of law-abiding citizens wishing to exercise their protected rights under the Second Amendment.” Opponents also argue that language describing the maga- zine ban creates confusion. The measure allows “reg- istered owners” of magazines that hold more than 10 rounds to retain them so long as they were purchased before the ban. “But how do you prove when you purchased a mag- azine?” Williamson asked. “There is no magazine ‘regis- tration.’ They don’t have serial numbers. There’s no way for the average person to prove they had it before the law was passed. That means citizens must prove their innocence.” Lawfully owned magazines that exceed 10 rounds may not be used for self-defense outside the home. Under the measure, possession would be restricted to the owner’s prop- erty, at a gunsmith, on a pri- vate shooting range or during a firearms competition. “The minute you leave the house, that 15-round mag- azine is now illegal, and you could be arrested and charged with a misdemeanor for each magazine in your possession because you’re not in your home or at a gun range,” Wil- liamson explained. “And you could be charged multiple times for the same magazines since magazines do not con- tain identifying markings.” “So that could make an otherwise legal gun-owner a criminal overnight,” Kahng commented. Text us your tire photo 541-519-8878 Old, young, rich, poor. Born here, just got here. we will text back with a quote for new tires! Our calling is you. 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