Resolution #2 2013
Offered by: Supervisor Wells
Seconded by: Councilman Rathbun
Resolution to Oppose The Process Of Enactment And Certain Provisions Contained Within The New York SAFE Act
WHEREAS, the right of the people to keep and bear arms is guaranteed as an individual right under the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution; and
WHEREAS, the right of the people to keep and bear arms for defense of life, liberty, and property is regarded as an inalienable right by the people of Hamilton County and the Town of Indian Lake
WHEREAS, the lawful ownership of firearms is, and has been, a valued tradition in Indian Lake, and the rights protected by the Second Amendment to the United States Constitution are exercised by many of our residents; and
WHEREAS, the people of Indian Lake derive economic and environmental benefits from all safe forms of recreation involving firearms, including, but not limited to, hunting and target shooting while utilizing all types of firearms available under the Constitution of the United States; and
WHEREAS, members of the Town Board of the Town of Indian Lake ,being elected to represent the people of Indian Lake are duly sworn by their oath of office to uphold the Constitution of the United States; and
WHEREAS, members of the New York State Assembly and the New York State Senate, being elected by the people of New York State, are duly sworn by their oath of office to uphold the Constitution of the United States; and
WHEREAS, the enactment of the NY SAFE Act (Chapter 1 of the Laws of 2013) has engendered significant controversy over both the process by which it was enacted and certain provisions contained within it; and
WHEREAS, it is our understanding that many State Legislators had less than an hour to read the legislation, which contained approximately twenty-five thousand words, before being forced to vote on it; and
WHEREAS, having reviewed the legislation and time constraints, it is our conclusion that there is no possible way any individual could have read the entire bill and understood its full implications prior to voting on it; and
WHEREAS, our State Legislators most certainly could not have had the time to request, and receive, the input of their constituents regarding this matter; and
WHEREAS, seeking, and considering, such public input is a standard to which we hold ourselves to in Indian Lake and
WHEREAS, this legislation has 60 sections, of which only three take effect immediately; and
WHEREAS, in our opinion, there was no reason for the Governor to use a message of necessity to bring this bill to vote immediately and bypass the three day maturing process for all legislation; and
WHEREAS, the mishandling of the process in crafting the NY SAFE Act resulted in complex policy changes, many of which have been left up to interpretation, and are confusing even to the State Legislators who voted on them, and the law enforcement officials who are required to enforce and explain them; and
WHEREAS, requiring law-abiding gun owners to verify ownership of certain types of firearms every five years, in addition to registering them on their permits, which now also must be renewed every 5 years, does not increase the safety of the public and is unnecessarily burdensome to the residents of New York State; and
WHEREAS, there will be a significant financial impact due to Hamilton County permits that will have to be renewed requiring additional manpower ; and
WHEREAS, this legislation prohibits the sale of firearm magazines with a capacity larger than seven rounds; and
WHEREAS, those firearm magazines with a capacity larger than seven rounds, which are authorized to be retained by existing owners, may only be loaded with seven rounds and eventually must be permanently altered to only accept seven rounds or be disposed of, thus constituting a seizure of legally owned personal property with no provision for compensation; and
WHEREAS, few or no low capacity (7 rounds or less) magazines currently exist for many of the firearms commonly possessed by law-abiding residents of New York State; and
WHEREAS, limiting the number of rounds to seven versus ten is arbitrary and capricious, has no correlation to public safety, unfairly burdens law-abiding gun owners, and puts an undue burden on gun manufacturers to retool their manufacturing plants; and
WHEREAS, the only persons who will comply with the new high-capacity magazine ban are law-abiding citizens, leaving the same high-capacity magazines in the hands of those who choose not to obey the law; and
WHEREAS, requiring documentation of all ammunition sales in New York State, as provided for in this legislation, is a significant unfunded mandate on business; and
WHEREAS, the New York State Combined Ballistic Identification System, which wasted $44 million in taxpayer money and resulted in zero convictions, illustrates the propensity of government to waste taxpayer resources when legislation is not properly reviewed; and
WHEREAS, Governor Cuomo has proposed spending $36 million dollars in his 2013-2014 Executive budget for the implementation of the NY SAFE Act at a time when New York State residents are crying out for tax relief; and
WHEREAS, this legislation severely impacts the possession and use of firearms now employed by the residents of the Town of Indian Lake for defense of life, liberty, and property; and
WHEREAS, this legislation severely impacts the possession and use of firearms now employed for safe forms of recreation including, but not limited to, hunting and target shooting; and
WHEREAS while there are some areas of the legislation that the Town Board of the Town of Indian Lake finds encouraging, such as addressing glaring shortcomings in the mental health system, the strengthening of Kendra’s Law and Mark’s law, as well as privacy protections for certain of pistol permit holders, by-and-large, we find the legislation does little more then negatively impact lawful gun ownership; and
WHEREAS, this legislation fails to offer any meaningful solutions to gun violence and places increased burdens where they do not belong, squarely on the backs of law-abiding citizens; and
WHEREAS, this legislation effectively turns countless New York State law-abiding gun owners into criminals; and
WHEREAS, the manner in which this legislation was brought forward for vote in the State Legislature is deeply disturbing to the Town Board of the Town of Indian Lake, now, therefore, be it
RESOLVED, that the Town Board of the Town of Indian Lake does hereby oppose, and request the repeal of, any legislation, including the sections within the NY SAFE Act (Chapter1 of the Laws of 2013), which infringe upon the right of the people to keep and bear arms; and further be it
RESOLVED, that the Town Board of the Town of Indian Lake considers such laws to be unnecessary and beyond lawful legislative authority granted to our State representatives; and further be it
RESOLVED, that the Town Board of the Town of Indian Lake strongly encourages members of the New York State Legislature to hold public hearings to address the issue of gun violence in a way that will produce meaningful results; and further be it
RESOLVED, that the Town Board of the Town Indian Lake requests the members of the New York State Senate and Assembly who represent all, or part of, Hamilton County to reply, in writing, with their views on, and actions taken, in support of, or opposition to, the NY SAFE Act; and further be it
RESOLVED, that a copy of this resolution be sent to, Governor Andrew Cuomo, Senator Charles Schumer, Senator Kirsten Gillibrand, Congressman Bill Owens New York State Senators Hugh Farley and Assemblyman Marc Butler,
Roll Call: Councilman Valentine Nay
Councilwoman Stanton Nay
Councilwoman Locke Aye
Councilman Rathbun Aye
Supervisor Wells Aye
Councilwoman Stanton explained to all present that she has been researching this since last week. However in good conscience she finds it difficult to ask for a repeal of the Safe Act when there are things in it she feels are extremely valuable (such as the penalties for killing of an emergency responder and the mental health reviews). She told all that she completely supported the Resolution the County voted on from the Sheriff’s Association, copy of County Resolution attached herein, because these are the people on the front line and they will be the ones having to enforce these laws. Some of which she knows will be difficult. She asked the Board to support the County Resolution that was in support of the New York State Sherriff’s Association. Kim Mitchell stated that he had read this Resolution and a lot of it was for the Law Officer’s themselves’ and he felt that it basically said the same thing as the Resolution the Board just passed concerning the clips. She Stated that this one states that they are willing to set down and hammer out the difficulties in the Law. Kim stated that he feels the same way, he knows there are good things in the Law that he supports, but the way Governor Cuomo did this should not have been done. He felt that the Governor jumped the gun without talking to relevant people, such as the State Police, he feels that he dumped everything into their laps as well as putting forty million dollars in his budget for the gun control bill, while saying he did not raise taxes. Kim feels that this was done totally illegally and against the Constitution. Many people such as Rick Ackerman and Raynard Corrow, from the community reiterated what Kim had said. They asked why not repeal it and start over and do it right, how they did it was wrong. Supervisor Wells stated that he supports the County Resolution also and there wasn’t that much difference and the message is the same. Councilwoman Stanton made a motion to support the County Resolution in support of the New York State Sherriff’s Association. Seconded by, Supervisor Wells.
Supervisor Wells reiterated to all that the Board had already voted on the Resolution # 2, opposing the safe act law, and this was a motion to support the County Resolution.
Roll Call: Councilman Valentine Aye
Councilwoman Stanton Aye
Councilwoman Locke Aye
Councilman Rathbun Aye
Supervisor Wells Aye