Letter To NoVa Communities Concerned About Gun Stores [View all]
The following op-ed is an open letter written by Rep. Don Beyer (D-Va.).
The arrival of two new gun stores in Northern Virginia in close proximity to families and schools set off a wave of concern from constituents. First, NOVA Firearms opened near Franklin Sherman Elementary School in McLean. Then NOVA Armory opened its doors in Arlingtons vibrant Lyon Park neighborhood. Almost every person who contacted me expressed strong opposition to gun stores at these locations.
Thanks to Virginias Dillon Rule, state control preempts local authority. In these cases, it means Arlington and Fairfax Counties cannot prohibit these stores from opening, regardless of the overwhelming will of local families and schools. The power to stop this from happening rests with a gun-friendly General Assembly, which has refused to help, despite the efforts of Northern Virginias delegation in Richmond.
Over time the gun lobby and its allies in Congress have deliberately limited the enforcement capability of the ATF, using appropriations riders, restrictions snuck into must-pass spending bills that are meant to force a change in policy. The gun lobby has used appropriations riders to prevent the ATF and other law enforcement from properly regulating the sale of guns and investigating illegal gun purchases. Limits on trace data could be used to crack down on bad apple gun dealers, but use of trace data has been blocked by Congress. These tactics jeopardize the oversight ability of the ATF and potentially put our communities in danger.
Yesterday I introduced a bill, the ATF Enforcement Act, to undo these restrictions on the ATFs enforcement authority. The bill would also remove the requirement that the ATFs Director be confirmed by the Senate. Since 2006 lawmakers backed by the gun lobby have refused to confirm the nominees of both Democratic and Republican presidents. Only one Director has been confirmed in the last decade.
https://www.arlnow.com/2016/04/14/op-ed-letter-to-nova-communities-concerned-about-gun-stores/