ReportWire

Tag: concealed carry

  • Jeanine Pirro’s comments on Washington gun laws, explained

    U.S. Attorney for the District of Columbia Jeanine Pirro caused a stir among Second Amendment supporters when she talked about a gun crackdown during a Fox News appearance. 

    Referring to the city’s recent decline in homicides, Pirro said: 

    “You bring a gun into the district, you mark my words, you’re going to jail. I don’t care if you have a license in another district and I don’t care if you’re a law-abiding gun owner somewhere else. You bring a gun into this district, count on going to jail and hope you get the gun back.”

    U.S. Rep. Greg Steube, R-Fla., said Feb. 2 that he has a license to carry a firearm in Florida and Washington, D.C., and brings “a gun into the district every week.” The National Association for Gun Rights criticized Pirro for “threatening to arrest people for carrying in DC, even if they are law-abiding and licensed.”  

    Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis wrote Feb. 3, “Second Amendment rights are not extinguished just because an American visits DC.” 

    Pirro sought to clarify her position in follow-up social media posts Feb. 3, describing herself as a “proud supporter of the Second Amendment.” Washington, D.C., law requires handguns carried into the city be licensed with district police, she said.

    “We are focused on individuals who are unlawfully carrying guns and will continue building on that momentum to keep our communities safe,” Pirro said

    Pirro’s Feb. 2 comments oversimplified the district’s gun laws. People can legally possess firearms by registering their weapons in the district, and obtaining a Washington, D.C., concealed carry permit would allow them to legally carry it outside their homes and places of business. The district does not recognize other states’ firearm registrations, but people can lawfully transport firearms through the district if they follow certain rules.

    What are Washington, D.C.’s firearm registration requirements? 

    Washington, D.C., has historically had strict gun regulations. The district had essentially banned handguns for about 30 years until 2008, when a Supreme Court decision overturned the rule. 

    Registering firearms with the Metropolitan Police Department is required to legally possess a gun in the district, which allows most people to register rifles, shotguns, revolvers and handguns.

    Firearm registration is required for most gun owners, including district residents, business owners and both residents and nonresidents with concealed carry licenses. 

    The Metropolitan Police Department says people are eligible to register firearms if they meet certain requirements, including: 

    • Being 21 or older (or 18 or older with a notarized statement from a guardian);

    • Completing the department’s free firearms training and safety class; 

    • Having no convictions for certain weapons offenses;

    • Having no felony convictions;

    • And having no indictments for weapons offenses or violent crimes.

    Government-issued service weapons do not have to be registered. Some people, including qualified current and retired law enforcement officers and on-duty active military members, are not required to register their firearms.

    Firearm registration allows a person “to possess, but not carry, the gun,” said Andrew Willinger, a Georgia State University law professor and gun regulation expert. 

    Some weapons are ineligible to be registered, including: sawed-off shotguns, machine guns, short-barreled rifles, .50 caliber BMG rifles and assault weapons. 

    What are the district’s open carry and concealed carry laws? 

    Openly carrying firearms is generally prohibited; people with valid firearm registrations can carry their firearms in their homes or places of business. They also can use their firearms for lawful recreational purposes — such as at firearms training, safety classes or at a gun range — and transport them within legal limits

    People age 21 and older who are eligible to register firearms and meet additional requirements can get a Washington D.C. concealed carry license if they complete required training

    Neither residents nor nonresidents are allowed to carry concealed guns in the district without this license. 

    There are some exceptions, including for  qualified current and retired law enforcement officers.

    Licensees cannot carry firearms in schools, hospitals, polling places, public transportation, government buildings and other specific locations.

    In August 2025, Pirro’s office announced it would stop pursuing felony charges for carrying rifles or shotguns.

    Can nonresidents get a concealed carry license in Washington, D.C.?

    Yes, nonresidents can obtain concealed carry licenses — and they need licenses to legally carry their firearms. 

    “If a nonresident brings a gun into D.C. and does not have a D.C. permit, that is unlawful regardless of whether the gunowner is licensed in his or her state of residence or law-abiding,” Willinger said in an email. 

    Can nonresidents bring their firearms in or through the district?

    Yes, under certain conditions.

    Under federal law, it is generally legal for people to transport guns from one state where they can be lawfully possessed to another state where they can be lawfully possessed. People do not have to comply with gun laws in each state they pass through, as long as the firearm is not loaded or readily accessible, Willinger said. 

    In the district, nonresidents without a Washington, D.C., concealed carry license can bring firearms in vehicles as long as they are unloaded and as long as the firearms and ammunition are not readily accessible. If transporting firearms in ways other than in vehicles, they must be unloaded and stored in locked containers. 

    If a nonresident travels through the district with a firearm that isn’t registered in Washington, D.C., they should go straight to and from their destination.

    Nonresidents traveling to or from a lawful recreational firearm-related activity don’t need to register their firearm, so long as they can present proof that they legally possess their firearm in their home state and that they are on the way to or from that activity.

    RELATED: Trump said Washington, DC, ‘always’ has ‘a murder a week.’ That’s wrong

    RELATED: How does Washington, D.C.’s homicide rate compare with other countries? 

    RELATED: Crime is underreported, but not just in Washington, D.C., where Trump claims data is inaccurate ​

    Source link

  • Are guns barred at protests, as Patel said? Mostly not

    After the fatal shooting of concealed carry permitholder Alex Pretti, debate over gun rights added a new layer to the federal government’s aggressive immigration enforcement activity in Minneapolis.

    Top Trump administration officials said because Pretti carried a handgun and ammunition, he planned to assassinate law enforcement.

    The day after Pretti was killed, FBI Director Kash Patel discussed the case on Fox News’ “Sunday Morning Futures.” 

    Patel said, “You cannot bring a firearm loaded with multiple magazines to any sort of protest that you want. It’s that simple. You don’t have the right to break the law and incite violence.”

    The administration shared an image of a gun and extra ammunition it said Border Patrol agents took from Pretti on Jan. 24 on Nicollet Avenue in south Minneapolis. 

    Video footage that surfaced in the first 48 hours after the shooting does not show Pretti holding the gun in his hands or pointing it at federal agents at any point. Some footage shows agents had disarmed Pretti shortly before he was shot.

    The administration said the Department of Homeland Security would conduct an internal investigation, but its scope was reportedly limited

    The shooting of a protester who had a concealed carry permit prompted criticism by gun-rights advocates, who pointed to Second Amendment protections.

    “Every peaceable Minnesotan has the right to keep and bear arms — including while attending protests, acting as observers, or exercising their First Amendment rights,” the Minnesota Gun Owners Caucus wrote. “These rights do not disappear when someone is lawfully armed, and they must be respected and protected at all times.”

    The FBI declined to comment for this article. Patel sought to clarify his stance in a Jan. 26 interview with Fox News’ Sean Hannity, saying, “We are not going after people and infringing on their freedom of speech to peacefully protest. We are definitely not going after people in their Second Amendment rights to bear arms — only if you incite violence and or threaten to do harm to law enforcement officials and break the law in any other way.”

    We asked 13 legal experts about Patel’s statement. They agreed that Patel was wrong about the Minnesota law, although they cautioned that some states do ban guns at protests. 

    In general, “There is no blanket prohibition or long-standing tradition against bringing otherwise lawfully owned and carried firearms to a protest, parade, demonstration, or other public event,” said Clark Neily, senior vice president for legal studies at the libertarian Cato Institute. “To the contrary, the default practice or tradition is that someone who is lawfully carrying a firearm may bring it to public gatherings, including protests and demonstrations.”

    It hasn’t been unusual to see people carrying guns at protests in recent years, such as at a 2020 protest against Michigan’s pandemic laws at the state capitol in Lansing.

    Was Pretti within his rights to carry a gun?

    Experts widely agree that because the state legally permitted Pretti to carry a gun, he was within his rights in Minnesota to do so, including at a protest.

    While some states’ laws restrict guns at protests, “Minnesota has no such law in place,” said Konstadinos Moros, director of legal research and education at the Second Amendment Foundation. 

    Eleven states and the District of Columbia ban concealed weapons at demonstrations and protests, and 11 states and the district ban open carry of weapons at demonstrations or protests, according to a tracker assembled by the anti gun-violence group Giffords. Of these, seven states and D.C. ban both.

    Several gun law experts also told PolitiFact they are unaware of any states that explicitly ban something else Patel mentioned: extra magazines for ammunition. 

    Some social media commentators said Pretti broke the law by not physically carrying his permit or other identification. (Homeland Security Secretary Kristi Noem and former top Customs and Border Patrol official in Minneapolis Greg Bovino have alleged that Pretti carried no ID.) State law says not carrying a permit is a “petty misdemeanor” subject to a fine of up to $25. Such a violation “does not constitute a crime,” state law says.

    Federal officials have said that Pretti went beyond observing and was interfering with a law enforcement activity. Experts agreed that Pretti would have been legally barred from threatening, interfering with or lying to officers. “As a general matter, peacefully observing a demonstration is different from criminally obstructing law enforcement,” said David B. Kopel, research director at the conservative Independence Institute.

    Video footage that has surfaced so far does not show that Pretti criminally obstructed law enforcement, though uncertainties and gaps remain. Some footage begins as he helps a woman who had been pushed into the snow by a federal agent; he was holding a phone in his hand.

    A majority of states have more expansive laws than Minnesota’s, allowing concealed carrying of guns without a permit. “In those states with broad public-carry rights, the mere fact that an individual is armed at a protest is not itself a crime,” said Darrell Miller, a University of Chicago law professor. 

    What have courts said about gun rights at protests?

    Legal experts said the Supreme Court’s record bolsters a Second Amendment right to carry guns at protests, which are sometimes referred to in laws as “public gatherings” or “assemblies.”

    The most recent notable Supreme Court decision is New York State Rifle & Pistol Association Inc. v. Bruen from 2022. The justices, in a 6-3 decision, found that the right to carry a firearm in public for self-defense has deep historical roots, and that a “special need” is not necessary to exercise it.

    The decision allowed states to ban public carry in certain “sensitive places,” such as schools and government buildings, and some states have moved to restrict the carrying of firearms at some events, such as protests, said Timothy Zick, a William & Mary Law School professor. Whether those laws would pass muster at the Supreme Court depends on whether there were similar laws during the 18th and possibly the 19th century, Zick said.

    A Supreme Court case currently under review, Wolford v. Lopez, will decide whether Hawaii can restrict people’s ability to bring guns onto private property that is open to the public. As part of the previous ruling, the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals struck down California’s ban on carrying guns at public gatherings. Moros said that victory at an appeals court that’s “pretty hostile” to the Second Amendment is notable.

    In another decision released Jan. 20, the Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals found that Maryland’s prohibition on carrying guns near public demonstrations is constitutional. This split between circuits could make the Supreme Court more likely to weigh in on a case that explicitly involves protests and gun rights, Moros said.

    Neily agreed that based on the recent court record, it’s “quite likely that laws against carrying otherwise lawfully possessed firearms at protests and other public events would be struck down under the Second Amendment.”

    Our ruling

    Patel said, “You cannot bring a firearm loaded with multiple magazines to any sort of protest that you want. It’s that simple.”

    Some states have laws that ban guns at protests, but Minnesota’s concealed carry law does not include such a ban. Pretti had a concealed carry permit. Even if he did not have the permit or an ID on him at the time, Minnesota law considers that a minor infraction. Some states’ laws are more permissive than Minnesota, allowing people to bring guns to protests even if they don’t have a concealed carry permit, as Pretti did.

    The statement contains an element of truth — the legality of bringing guns to protests depends on the state — but ignores that this incident happened in Minnesota, where the law allows guns at protests. We rate the statement Mostly False.

    CLARIFICATION, Jan. 27, 2026: This version clarifies the description of the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals decision on a California law.

    Source link

  • Florida judge rejects under-21 concealed carry ban



    Credit: Shutterstock

    Siding with a 19-year-old man who was spotted with a gun in his waistband, a Broward County circuit judge Friday ruled that a state law barring people under age 21 from carrying concealed weapons violates Second Amendment rights.

    Judge Frank Ledee issued a nine-page ruling that said Florida’s “prohibition on the concealed carry of firearms by eighteen-to-twenty year olds strips a class of legal adults of their ability to exercise the very right the Constitution guarantees.”

    Ledee cited U.S. Supreme Court rulings in recent years that required analyzing the “historical tradition” of firearm regulation when determining whether laws violate the Second Amendment.

    “The state has failed to identify Founding-era law that broadly prohibited the concealed carry of firearms by eighteen-to-twenty year olds,” Ledee wrote. “The state also failed to cite to any historical regulation imposing a burden or justification comparable to Florida’s concealed carry ban as applied to eighteen-to-twenty year olds.”

    The ruling had not been posted on the Broward County circuit court website Friday afternoon but was posted on the J.A.A.B. Blog, a site with local legal news, and was reported by the South Florida Sun Sentinel.

    Ledee ruled that the law was unconstitutional as applied to the specific case of Joel Walkes, who was arrested in March after a police officer saw a bulge in his waistband. Walkes was carrying a semi-automatic pistol, Ledee wrote. The judge dismissed a third-degree felony charge against Walkes.

    The ruling focused on an age limitation for carrying concealed weapons — which is separate from a more highly publicized state law that prevents people under age 21 from buying rifles and other long guns.

    The Legislature passed the ban on buying long guns after the 2018 mass shooting at Parkland’s Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School that killed 17 people. Federal law has long barred people under 21 from buying handguns. While sales of firearms are prohibited, people under 21 may have guns, for example, if they receive them as gifts.

    Friday’s ruling came amid a flurry of legal battles in Florida and other states about gun rights. The National Rifle Association is challenging the 2018 Florida law barring people under 21 from buying long guns. Federal district and appeals courts have upheld the law, but an NRA appeal is pending at the U.S. Supreme Court.

    Meanwhile, a panel of the state’s 1st District Court of Appeal in September ruled that Florida’s longstanding ban on openly carrying guns is unconstitutional. Attorney General James Uthmeier embraced the panel’s decision as “the law of the state” and issued guidance for prosecutors, police and sheriffs warning them not to arrest or put on trial “law-abiding citizens carrying a firearm in a manner that is visible to others.”

    Uthmeier also has refused to defend the gun-buying age limit at the U.S. Supreme Court.


    Subscribe to Orlando Weekly newsletters.

    Follow us: Apple News | Google News | NewsBreak | Reddit | Instagram | Facebook Bluesky | Or sign up for our RSS Feed


    The judge ruled that a state law barring people under age 21 from carrying concealed weapons violates Second Amendment rights

    The court agreed with the Department of Homeland Security that the case should be paused until government attorneys can work again.

    ‘We must call it what it truly is: the documentation of the sexual abuse of children’





    Jim Saunders, News Service of Florida
    Source link
  • Guns in Florida: Open carry vs. concealed carry. What this sheriff says about both

    A decade after the Florida Supreme Court upheld the state’s ban on open carry in 2015, a state appeals court ruled Sept. 10 that it is unconstitutional.

    In a significant decision, a three-judge panel of the 1st District Court of Appeal said the open-carry ban is incompatible with the nation’s “historical tradition of firearm regulation.” It cited U.S. Supreme Court rulings on Second Amendment issues.

    The change does not go into effect until Sept. 25, and legislative action will be needed to align state law with the decision. While the ruling technically applies only to the 32 north Florida counties of the 1st District, the Florida Sheriffs Association is advising the state’s 67 county sheriffs not to make any arrests for the open carrying of firearms.

    Curious about what this means for you? See video of Polk County Sheriff Grady Judd discussing what this change means for Florida gun owners.

    Watch the video of Florida Sheriff Grady Judd discussing open carry

    What is ‘open carry?’

    Open carry” means you can publicly carry a legally owned firearm that is kept in plain sight or partially concealed, usually holstered.

    In Florida, openly carrying a firearm is a second-degree misdemeanor with a $500 fine or a maximum of 60 days in jail.

    However, Florida Statute 790.25 provides exemptions for:

    • Law enforcement, corrections officers, game wardens, forest officials, military, and guards

    • Members of firearms clubs while at gatherings or traveling to and from them

    • People who manufacture firearms while they’re on the job

    • Anyone “engaged in fishing, camping, or lawful hunting or going to or returning from a fishing, camping, or lawful hunting expedition”

    • Someone carrying a firearm in a concealed manner may “briefly and openly display” it to someone else, but not in an angry or threatening manner.

    What does ‘concealed carry’ mean?

    Concealed carry” means you can publicly carry a legally owned firearm that is hidden from view. Concealed carry is currently legal in all 50 states but some states, including Florida before the law was changed in 2023, require special training and a license before it is allowed.

    Permitless carry” or “constitutional carry” allows both, without permits, licensing or training.

    Is open carry legal in Florida now? Can I start wearing my gun?

    Depends on where you live.

    Several county sheriffs and local police departments in Florida have announced they will not enforce the open carry ban following the decision, along with some police departments, and at least one state attorney said his office will not prosecute violations.

    Legal challenges to the decision are possible, and the state attorney general could choose to appeal, but since Florida Attorney General Jim Uthmeier called the decision a win for the Second Amendment, that seems unlikely.

    “As we’ve all witnessed over the last few days, our God-given right to self-defense is indispensable,” he posted on X.

    Since Ray said that “reasonable regulation” would be preserved, even if open carry becomes the law of the state, restrictions would still exist in courtrooms, courtroom parking lots, meetings of the Florida Legislature, polling places, school and college events, professional athletic events, career centers, and college or university facilities.

    Currently, private property owners may also ban firearms on their property.

    This article originally appeared on The Daytona Beach News-Journal: Florida’s open carry ban lifted? Sheriff explains new change

    Source link

  • Can you have a gun in your car without a concealed carry permit? What NC law says

    Can you have a gun in your car without a concealed carry permit? What NC law says

    Open carry is legal in North Carolina without a permit if you are at least 18 years old and have no felony convictions, according to Raleigh-based Manning Law Firm.

    Open carry is legal in North Carolina without a permit if you are at least 18 years old and have no felony convictions, according to Raleigh-based Manning Law Firm.

    The Kansas City Star

    Concealed carry permits allow North Carolina residents to transport firearms on their person and in their vehicles. But what if you don’t have a permit?

    Open carry is legal in North Carolina without a permit if you are at least 18 years old and have no felony convictions, according to Raleigh-based Manning Law Firm.

    State law also includes rules on driving with a firearm in your vehicle without a permit. Here’s what to know about open carry while traveling in North Carolina.

    Can you open carry in your vehicle in NC?

    North Carolina law allows gun owners without concealed carry permits to transport firearms in their vehicles, but the weapons must be displayed openly, visible and readily seen, according to Charlotte-based law firm Randall & Stump.

    However, state law allows those without concealed carry permits to store weapons in the trunk, since they wouldn’t be within reach of anyone in the vehicle.

    “If you’re driving a vehicle with access to the trunk area, like an SUV or van, your weapon must be securely locked away in a container,” the firm says.

    What is the penalty for concealing a gun inside a vehicle in NC?

    First-time offenders convicted of illegally concealing a weapon without a permit could be charged with a Class 2 misdemeanor, which comes with up to 60 days in jail and a fine, according to Randall & Stump.

    Any subsequent offense could result in a felony conviction, punishable by up to 39 months in prison depending on criminal history, the firm says.

    Can you fly with a gun in NC?

    People over the age of 18 can fly with firearms and ammunition, but they must be unloaded and in a locked, hard-sided container. They can only be transported in checked baggage, according to the Transportation Security Administration.

    Gun owners must also declare their firearms or ammunition when checking their bags at the ticket counter, the TSA says.

    What is the penalty for carrying a loaded gun through TSA?

    If TSA finds you have a loaded gun in the airport, “you will be charged with a crime and face civil fines,” says law firm Randall & Stump.

    “Also, if you have an unloaded gun that is not stored and transported properly, you will face charges and civil fines.”

    Attempting to transport a gun through a TSA checkpoint could lead to thousands of dollars in fines, the firm says.

    Fines range from a few hundred dollars for BB guns and flare pistols to nearly $10,000 for any type of loaded firearm (or unloaded with accessible ammunition).

    You could also be fined between $650 and $2,610 for firearms that are not stored properly inside your luggage.

    Ask the North Carolina Service Journalism Team

    Have a question about your community you’d like answered? Or maybe a tip or story idea you’d like to share? The service journalism teams at The News & Observer and The Charlotte Observer want to hear from you.

    Related stories from Charlotte Observer

    Evan Moore is a service journalism reporter for the Charlotte Observer. He grew up in Denver, North Carolina, where he previously worked as a reporter for the Denver Citizen, and is a UNC Charlotte graduate.

    Source link

  • Gun-free zones, more money for higher education and renter protections this week in the Colorado legislature

    Gun-free zones, more money for higher education and renter protections this week in the Colorado legislature

    Transgender and nonbinary people would be better protected from harassment in Colorado under new bill

    Transgender and nonbinary people would receive more explicit protections in Colorado’s anti-bias and harassment law if a newly introduced bill becomes law.

    Advocates characterize the bill as a simple legislative fix to ensure gender identity and expression are protected across state law, while also sending a message about Colorado’s values.

    “(The bill) ensures nonbinary and trans people are seen and represented in every part of Colorado law, which is especially important now with the wave of anti-trans rhetoric and legislation across the country,” said Garrett Royer, political director for LGBTQ advocacy organization One Colorado. “It helps the state remain a leader on LGBTQ rights with a very simple legislative fix.”
    Read more

    Colorado legislators set aside $7.2 million to fund longer psychiatric hospital stays

    Low-income Coloradans with mental illnesses are poised to receive longer hospital stays after state legislators set aside money to expand a decades-old Medicaid rule.

    Federal law requires that Medicaid patients hospitalized in psychiatric facilities be discharged after 15 hospital days in a month or the facility doesn’t get paid. The rule was intended to prevent hospitals from warehousing patients, but advocates and psychiatrists say that it instead pushes hundreds of vulnerable Coloradans out of the facilities prematurely and into a cycle of homelessness, incarceration and emergency room visits.
    Read more

    Parks, bars, protests stripped from bill that would create gun-free zones in Colorado

    A proposal to limit where people can carry firearms in Colorado, openly or with concealed carry permits, was narrowed substantially Wednesday as sponsors fought to win a key committee vote in the state Senate.

    The bill as introduced would have banned firearms from being carried at a slew of places, including stadiums, protests at public locations, bars, places of worship, public parks, libraries and more. It was amended to only ban firearms at schools, from preschool to college, as well as polling places, the state legislature and local government buildings, though local governments could opt out. It would allow exceptions for security and law enforcement.
    Read more

    Colorado lawmakers’ $40.6 billion budget caps tuition hikes, includes money for auto theft prevention

    Colorado lawmakers unveiled a state budget proposal Tuesday that would provide more money for higher education, address long waitlists of jail inmates with competency issues and boost pay for home health care workers.

    Those are among the highlights as legislators look to spend about $40.6 billion in the next fiscal year, which begins July 1. The bipartisan Joint Budget Committee will now usher the bill — one of the few must-pass measures considered by the General Assembly each year — through the legislature and to Gov. Jared Polis’ desk in coming weeks.
    Read more

    “For-cause” eviction protections for renters overcome moderate Democrats’ challenge in Colorado Senate

    Democrats in the Colorado Senate fought off a challenge from within their own party Monday and advanced a bill that would increase displacement protections for tenants — clearing that hurdle nearly a year after the legislative death of a similar proposal.

    The bill generally would give renters of apartments and other housing a right of first refusal to renew an expiring lease. Landlords would need to have a good reason for not allowing them to renew, such as failure to pay rent or plans for substantial renovations.
    Read more

    How Wyatts Towing allegedly circumvented Colorado’s new towing law — and why legislators are pushing for further reform

    HB24-1051, introduced this legislative session, would outlaw property owners from using automated emails to authorize tows. The bill also would mandate that the authorizing party must be a property owner or someone from a rent-collecting third party — banning parking management companies from doing this on the tower’s behalf.

    The bill, as introduced, sought to tackle what lawmakers and consumer advocates said was an economic incentive for towers to haul away as many cars as possible. They wanted to shift the entire landscape of residential towing by making property owners pay for tows rather than vehicle owners.
    Read more

    Colorado poised to ban cities’ limits on how many people can live together

    Colorado lawmakers are poised to ban occupancy limits in cities and towns across the state, clearing the way for more roommates to live together as part of Democrats’ push to reform local zoning regulations and address the state’s housing crisis.

    Roughly two dozen cities and towns in Colorado have the type of occupancy limits that would be prohibited under HB24-1007, which cleared the state Senate on Tuesday. The measure would prohibit local governments from limiting how many unrelated people can live in one home or housing unit, except for health and safety reasons.
    Read more

    Why Colorado’s push for more high-density housing near transit irks cities — even some that allow it

    Colorado cities are ready for a legal fight if necessary to stop a state push to overhaul local housing density rules and allow more tightly packed development along train and bus routes.

    While many local governments support the goal of concentrating people in apartments around transit hubs so they drive less, mayors have objected to what they see as state leaders intruding on local power. It’s the same local control problem that led to the defeat of a similar state push last year in the Colorado legislature.

    Lawmakers revived the transit-focused housing density bill last month and are moving it through the state House.
    Read more

    Next year’s state budget, gun restrictions and Front Range trains under debate in Colorado legislature this week

    The Colorado legislature this week will take on one of its only mandated actions — and by far its costliest: The state’s budget.

    The budget package, known as the long bill, lays out how the state will spend some $18 billion in general fund dollars in the next year. It also reveals some of the state’s priorities — such as the end of the so-called budget stabilization factor that has shortchanged state education funding — as the proposal works its way through both chambers.
    Read more

    Stay up-to-date with Colorado Politics by signing up for our weekly newsletter, The Spot.

    The Denver Post

    Source link