From News Nation:
“What is in the bipartisan gun
violence bill signed by Biden?”
President Joe Biden on Saturday
signed the most sweeping gun violence bill in decades, a bipartisan compromise
that seemed unimaginable until a recent series of mass shootings, including the
massacre of 19 students and two teachers at a Texas elementary school. Here are
the highlights of the gun violence bill:
—Expanded background checks:
State and local juvenile and mental health records of gun purchasers will be
part of federal background checks for buyers age 18 to 20. Three-day maximum
for gathering records will be lengthened to up to 10 days to search juvenile
data. If 10 days lapse without a resolution, the sale will go through.
—“Boyfriend loophole”:
Convicted domestic violence offenders will be denied guns if they have a
current or past “continuing serious relationship of a romantic or intimate
nature” with victim. Abusers’ right to buy firearms will be restored after five
years if no additional violent crimes are committed. Firearms are currently
denied to domestic abusers if they are married, live with or had a child with
victim.
—Red flag laws: Federal
aid will be given to the 19 states, plus the District of Columbia, that have
laws helping authorities get court orders to temporarily remove guns from
people deemed dangerous. Those states will need strong processes for
challenging the taking of firearms. Other states could use money for crisis
intervention programs.
—Mental health: The bill
will expand community behavioral health clinics, help states bolster mental
health programs in schools and provide more mental health consultations
remotely.
—Education: The bill will
increase spending on school mental health, crisis intervention, violence
prevention programs, mental health worker training and school safety.
—Federally licensed gun
dealers: Current law requires that people “engaged in the business” of
selling guns be licensed, which means they must conduct background checks. The
bill defines that as selling firearms ‘‘to predominantly earn a profit,” in an
effort to prosecute people who evade the requirement.
—Gun traffickers: The bill
will create federal crimes for gun traffickers and “straw purchasers” who buy
guns for people who would not pass background checks. The penalties are up to
25 years in prison. Such offenders are now primarily prosecuted for paperwork
violations.
—Cost: The nonpartisan
Congressional Budget Office estimates the cost of the bill at $13 billion,
mostly for mental health and schools. That is more than paid for by further
delaying a 2020 regulation that’s never taken effect requiring drug
manufacturers to give rebates to Medicare recipients. That regulation would
increase federal Medicare costs.
^ This is a something, but
probably won’t do a whole lot to fix things. ^
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.