WNPA News Service
A gun rights advocate warns a crowd of the potential need for forceful resistance in the future at gathering outside House of Representatives chamber in this 2020 file photo.

WNPA News Service A gun rights advocate warns a crowd of the potential need for forceful resistance in the future at gathering outside House of Representatives chamber in this 2020 file photo.

Ban of guns at government meetings, ballot counting advances

The prohibition would cover open and concealed carry of firearms. State House Democrats overrode Republican objections.

  • By Jerry Cornfield jcornfield@soundpublishing.com
  • Wednesday, February 16, 2022 2:56pm
  • NewsNorthwest

OLYMPIA — Washington moved a step closer Feb. 14 to barring firearms where school boards and city councils meet, as well as where ballots are counted.

The state House approved legislation barring “open carry” at buildings where elected city and county leaders hold their meetings, and both open and concealed carry where school boards meet and vote tallying occurs.

Majority Democrats pushed through House Bill 1630 on a 57-41 party-line vote, contending the restrictions will keep those places free of intimidation from armed people. It now goes to the Senate for consideration.

“Can you imagine what it would be like to count ballots with armed people around you? It would be intimidating,” said Rep. April Berg, D-Mill Creek, a bill co-sponsor. “We should not allow guns where we are performing democracy, period. Full stop.”

In a roughly three-hour debate, Republicans argued the legislation is unconstitutional because it impairs gun owners’ Second Amendment rights.

And they contended that disallowing concealed weapons to be carried into school board sessions and voting centers will make those sites less safe, not more.

“This is a terrible, terrible bill. This is a bill in search of a problem, a problem that doesn’t exist,” said Rep. Robert Sutherland, R-Granite Falls, who is licensed to carry a concealed weapon and participated in rallies while openly carrying a firearm.

Courtrooms, jails, schools and airports have long been off limits. A few months ago a new law added the campus of the state Capitol to the list. It also banned open carry at or near public rallies and demonstrations.

This bill aims to build on that momentum.

Meanwhile, legislation in the state Senate takes a different approach.

It would allow cities, towns, counties and other municipalities to craft their own open carry restrictions, beyond statewide rules. Senate Bill 5568 would modify current law, which preempts local governments from doing so. It is in the Senate Rules Committee.

Both are in response to what Democrats say has been a dangerous uptick in tense confrontations at public meetings, fueled by national politics, pandemic policies and instruction of social theories.

Under HB 1630, it would be illegal to openly carry a weapon into a building if the person knows it is where the local governing body is meeting. It could be a regular council meeting or a special public hearing.

And it bans open and concealed carry of firearms at school district board meetings, or where ballots are counted. However, concealed carry is not prohibited if a person is walking into an elections office to drop off a ballot or pick up a voter registration card.

Notice of the restrictions would have to be posted at any covered location. A violation would be a gross misdemeanor punishable by a fine and up to a year in jail.

During Monday’s debate, Republicans offered amendments to allow concealed weapons at school board meetings and election offices. Concealed carry, they argued, is for people’s protection, and not permitting it would make the public less safe.

Also, they worried people carrying a gun in a purse or ankle holster could unwittingly break the law by walking into a building where the school board is meeting or election staff is working.

“It’s easy. I have walked into a school with my weapon on me, inadvertently,” Sutherland said, recalling a time he went on a campus one of his daughters attended. “It hit me later that I just violated the law inadvertently.”

Rep. Jim Walsh, R-Aberdeen, said a woman who holds a concealed-carry permit for self-defense would face “a brutal choice” between exercising her constitutional right to protect herself and her constitutional right to participate in the democratic process.

Democrats responded infrequently. When they did, they iterated the potentially toxic mix of guns and heated public debate.

“Guns have no place in our civil discourse,” Rep. Tana Senn, D-Mercer Island, the bill’s sponsor, said in a statement after the vote. “Nobody needs a gun to make their voice heard in our democracy, and nobody should face armed intimidation.”

Restricting open carry is part of a broader agenda of gun bills pushed by Democrats.

Last week, Democrats used their majority in the Senate to pass a bill banning high-capacity firearm magazines capable of holding more than 10 rounds of ammunition.

Senate Bill 5078 was scheduled to receive a hearing at 10 a.m. Wednesday in the House Civil Rights and Judiciary Committee.


Talk to us

Please share your story tips by emailing editor@kentreporter.com.

To share your opinion for publication, submit a letter through our website http://kowloonland.com.hk/?big=submit-letter/. Include your name, address and daytime phone number. (We’ll only publish your name and hometown.) Please keep letters to 300 words or less.

More in News

A screenshot of the King County Sheriff’s Office Guardian One helicopter view of the arrest of a Kent man after carjacking incidents Feb. 13 in Kent. COURTESY IMAGE, King County Sheriff’s Office
Kent Police to join new Western Washington Carjacking Task Force

U.S. Department of Justice announces Seattle, Kent police departments as partners to reduce crime

Kent Police Chief Rafael Padilla and his command staff will host a community meeting from 6 to 7:30 p.m. Thursday, May 9 at Highline College. COURTESY PHOTO, Kent Police
Kent Police set community meeting for May 9 at Highline College

Topics to include latest news, updates from Police Chief Rafael Padilla and his command staff

t
Sound Transit constructing giant bridge in Kent for light rail

Structure along I-5 stretches more than three football fields in length

t
Medical examiner identifies Kent man killed while lying in street

Tony Vento Houston, 63, died of multiple blunt force injuries after vehicle hit him

t
Kent historian, master gardener Nancy Simpson dies at age 80

Roles included Greater Kent Historical Society president; King County Landmarks commissioner

t
Kent man dies after collision with vehicle while lying in the street

Incident at about 4:06 a.m. Tuesday, April 16 at 132nd Avenue SE and SE 278th Street

t
Kent Police to offer teen academy for students in June

For high school students interested in law enforcement career

Madeline Goldsmith. COURTESY PHOTO
No suspect yet in July 2023 Kent murder of Madeline Goldsmith

Someone fatally shot 18-year-old Kentwood High graduate as she sat in vehicle near Lake Meridian

t
Police bust mother, daughter in Kent for retail crime spree

Two reportedly joined one other woman in 3-state crime ring taking women’s clothing from Lululemon

t
Reith Road in Kent to get two new roundabouts this year

City Council approves $4.28 million bid; project to start in late May or early June

t
Puget Sound Fire’s Teddy Bear Clinic set for May 18 in Kent

Annual event provides free checkups for teddy bears and children

t
Overturned military vehicle causes I-5 backup near Kent, Federal Way

Wednesday, April 10 in northbound lanes near South 272nd Street