That damnfool Colorado SB-34

Status
Not open for further replies.
Summarized History for Bill Number SB07-034
(The date the bill passed to the committee of the whole reflects the date the bill passed out of committee.)

01/10/2007 Introduced In Senate - Assigned to Judiciary
01/29/2007 Senate Committee on Judiciary Pass Amended to Senate Committee of the Whole
02/16/2007 Senate Second Reading Laid Over to 02/20/2007
02/20/2007 Senate Second Reading Special Order - Passed with Amendments
02/21/2007 Senate Third Reading Laid Over Daily
02/22/2007 Senate Third Reading Laid Over Daily
02/23/2007 Introduced In House - Assigned to Judiciary
02/23/2007 Senate Third Reading Passed
03/20/2007 House Committee on Judiciary Pass Unamended to House Committee of the Whole
03/23/2007 House Second Reading Laid Over
03/26/2007 House Second Reading Special Order - Passed
03/27/2007 House Third Reading Laid Over
03/28/2007 House Third Reading Passed
05/08/2007 Signed by the President of the Senate
05/08/2007 Signed by the Speaker of the House
05/08/2007 Sent to the Governor

This information is prepared as an informational service only and should not be relied upon as an official record of action taken by the Colorado General Assembly.
 
Gov. Ritter signed 26 bills into law on the 14th. SB-34 wasn't one of them. Keep those calls, emails, faxes and letters coming!
 
Preliminary report by local news states that Ritter signed this bill.....ggrrrrrrrrr
 
It's official....(from Channel 9 website)


Ritter signs concealed weapons law
posted by: Jeffrey Wolf , Web Producer

created: 5/17/2007 7:23:02 PM

DENVER (AP) - Gov. Bill Ritter signed 16 bills on Thursday, including one barring Colorado residents from obtaining concealed weapons permits from other states.

Out-of-state visitors will be allowed to use permits issued by their home states, and not a third state, under the law (Senate Bill 34).

House Majority Leader Alice Madden (D-Boulder) said she sponsored the bill because she was concerned people denied permits in Colorado could get them elsewhere.

Dudley Brown, spokesman for Rocky Mountain Gun Owners, said the bill could prevent some people who travel from defending themselves and their families when they are in Colorado.

Colorado permit holders must apply in person and undergo a background check. The permit costs $152.50 and lasts for five years.

Other new laws include one that will streamline procedures for notifying owners of mineral interests about planned surface development and will regulate negotiations of surface use agreements. Another requires treatment for firefighters with cancers that could be related to their jobs.

Ritter still has about 200 bills to sign before a June 4 deadline


(Copyright 2007. The Associated Press. All rights reserved.)
 
House Majority Leader Alice Madden (D-Boulder) said she sponsored the bill because she was concerned people denied permits in Colorado could get them elsewhere.

Oh, and there's a huge problem with Utah and Florida permit holders? Is there some sort of bloodbath going on that I don't know about?

Oh well, I'd rather visit Arizona, Utah, and Wyoming than Colorado.
 
Needless to say I'm disappointed in teh bill and it's signing. Loks like my FL & UT licenses will no longer be honored. Sad because I'm a California Resident an It's neraly impossible to get a CCW in Los Angelse, Therefore NO ability to carry in CO.

Hopefully someone will have the sense to allow a Colorado non-resident license without having to come to the state.

That would solve alot of problems for people liek me who live in NO ISSUE areas.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top