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SPONSOR: |
Robinson |
DATE TYPED: |
|
HB |
|
||
SHORT TITLE: |
Concealed Handgun Carry Act |
SB |
23/aHCPAC |
||||
|
ANALYST: |
Fox-Young |
|||||
APPROPRIATION
Appropriation
Contained |
Estimated Additional Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
||
FY03 |
FY04 |
FY03 |
FY04 |
|
|
|
|
|
$0.1 See Narrative |
Recurring |
General
Fund/OSF |
|
|
|
|
|
|
(Parenthesis ( )
Indicate Expenditure Decreases)
REVENUE
Estimated Revenue |
Subsequent Years Impact |
Recurring or
Non-Rec |
Fund Affected |
|
FY03 |
FY04 |
|
|
|
|
$0.1
Significant |
$0.1
Significant |
Recurring |
New
Concealed Handgun Carry Fund |
|
|
|
|
|
(Parenthesis
( ) Indicate Revenue Decreases)
Duplicates HB 916/aHCPAC
Responses
Received From
Department
of Public Safety (DPS)
Administrative
Office of the District Attorneys (AODA)
Attorney
General (AG)
Department
of Health (DOH)
SUMMARY
Synopsis
of HCPAC Amendment
The House Consumer and Public Affairs Committee
amends Senate Bill 23, providing that:
·
Applicants
for licenses must have satisfactorily completed a firearms training course approved
by the department for the category and caliber (original bill reads “or categories”) of handgun that the applicant wants to be
licensed to carry as a concealed handgun; and
· A concealed handgun license issued by the department shall include the category and caliber (original bill reads “or categories”) of handgun that the licensee is licensed to carry.
Significant Issues
The amended bill appears to provide that each
license will only cover one category, semi-automatic or not.
Synopsis
of Original Bill
Senate Bill 23 enacts the “Concealed Handgun
Carry Act,” providing for statewide, uniform standards for the issuance of
concealed handgun licenses.
The Department of Public Safety is authorized to
begin issuing licenses that shall be valid for a period of four years. The department shall promulgate rules
necessary to implement the provisions of the Act.
Applicants for licenses must meet minimum
qualifications as defined by the Act, and DPS is required to investigate
individuals’ qualifications.
All fees collected by the Act shall be placed in
a concealed handgun carry fund. Any unexpended
or unencumbered balance remaining at the end of any fiscal year shall not
revert to the general fund, but may instead be used to maintain the state’s
criminal history database. Money in the
concealed handgun carry fund is appropriated to the department to carry out the
provisions of the Act.
Section
The bill repeals Sections 29-18-1 through
29-18-12. (Laws 2001, Chapter 219)
Significant
Issues
The Attorney General (AG) notes that the bill
repeals the current unenforceable, statutory provisions, replacing them with
nearly identical language. The current
provisions are unenforceable based on a New Mexico Supreme Court order ruling
that a local option provision was unconstitutional. This bill does not include a local option
provision. AG notes that the
Supreme Court did not rule on whether the overall licensing proposal was
permissible under Article II, Section 6.
The bill does not provide for an appeal process
for revocation or suspense of a license, although the title of Section 7
includes the language “right to appeal.” (SEE ALSO TECHNICAL ISSUES)
The bill amends Section
DPS reports that it will be both difficult and
expensive to investigate applicant qualifications as provided by the bill. Specifically, the department indicates that
it will be difficult to ensure that an applicant is not under indictment for a
felony in New Mexico or any other state, that an applicant is not otherwise
prohibited by federal law or the law of any other jurisdiction from purchasing
or possessing a firearm, that an applicant has not been adjudicated as mentally
defective and that an individual is not addicted to alcohol or controlled
substances.
The bill requires that DPS issue or deny a license within 60 days of receiving an application. DPS notes that it currently takes eight to ten weeks to process a background check, indicating that the bill’s provisions regarding departmental response and those governing investigation of qualifications for licensure are incompatible.
FISCAL IMPLICATIONS
The proposed
legislation will likely have a significant fiscal impact on the Department of
Public Safety (DPS). Although the
legislation creates the concealed handgun carry fund, it is unknown whether
accrued revenues will cover the fiscal impact to DPS. The department indicates that although the
legislation provides for a $100 application fee, background checks currently
cost $31. The department reports that
$69 is not sufficient funding to cover other costs incurred in processing an
application.
The bill does not
contain an appropriation. DPS indicates
that without an appropriation to initiate the process, the department will not
have the resources to carry out the provisions of the Act in FY04. DPS notes that the department will need to
invest in additional computer hardware, software development, and staff to
administer the application process.
DPS estimates that the
department will need an additional attorney and support staff personnel to
address increased litigation resulting from the Act.
Any fiscal impact on the judiciary will be proportional to the number of court cases initiated to handle appeals.
TECHNICAL ISSUES
The AG notes the following concerns:
DPS reports that Public Law 92-544 requires that
information acquired through a nationwide criminal history inquiry not be
disseminated beyond the State Identification Bureau. Amending the bill to include a
confidentiality clause would assure compliance with this law.
AOC notes that an amendment to the bill might
include language detailing an applicant’s right to appeal the denial of a license
to district court.
JCF/njw