BILL ANALYSIS                                                                                                                                                                                                    Ó



                                                                            



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                                 UNFINISHED BUSINESS


          Bill No:  SB 140
          Author:   Leno (D) and Steinberg (D), et al.
          Amended:  4/11/13 
          Vote:     27 - Urgency

           
           SENATE BUDGET & FISCAL REVIEW COMMITTEE  :  14-0, 3/4/13
          AYES:  Leno, Emmerson, Anderson, Beall, Berryhill, Block,  
            DeSaulnier, Hancock, Hill, Jackson, Monning, Roth, Wright,  
            Wyland
          NO VOTE RECORDED:  Nielsen, Price

           SENATE FLOOR  :  31-0, 3/7/13
          AYES:  Anderson, Beall, Berryhill, Block, Calderon, Cannella,  
            Corbett, Correa, De León, DeSaulnier, Emmerson, Evans, Gaines,  
            Galgiani, Hancock, Hernandez, Hill, Huff, Jackson, Knight,  
            Lara, Leno, Liu, Pavley, Price, Roth, Steinberg, Walters,  
            Wolk, Wright, Yee
          NO VOTE RECORDED:  Fuller, Lieu, Monning, Nielsen, Padilla,  
            Wyland, Vacancy, Vacancy, Vacancy

           ASSEMBLY FLOOR  :  65-10, 4/18/13 - See last page for vote


           SUBJECT  :    Firearms:  prohibited persons

           SOURCE  :     Author


           DIGEST  :    This bill appropriates $24 million from the Dealers  
          Record of Sale (DROS) Special Account to the Department of  
          Justice (DOJ) for costs associated with regulatory and  
          enforcement of illegal possession of firearms by prohibited  
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          persons, and requires the DOJ to report specified information to  
          the Joint Legislative Budget Committee by March 1, 2015 and  
          every March 1 until 2019.

           Assembly Amendments  add coauthors and make minor technical  
          amendments to the legislative findings and declarations.

           ANALYSIS  :    Existing law authorizes the DOJ to utilize the DROS  
          fee, which is imposed upon every transfer or sale of a firearm  
          in California for firearms related regulatory activities,  
          including enforcement activities related to possession.

          This bill:

           1. Appropriates $24 million from the DROS Special Account to  
             the DOJ for costs associated with regulatory and enforcement  
             of illegal possession of firearms by prohibited persons.

           2. Requires the DOJ report to the Joint Legislative Budget  
             Committee no later than March 1, 2015 and no later than March  
             1, each year thereafter, all of the following:

                   The degree to which the backlog of weapons has been  
                reduced or eliminated.

                   The number of weapons confiscated through Armed  
                Prohibited Persons System (APPS) enforcement efforts.

                   The number of agents hired by the DOJ to conduct APPS  
                enforcement.

                   The number of individuals cleared off of the APPS list  
                annually through 

              March 1, 2015 and March 1, 2019.
                   The number of individuals added to the APPS list  
                annually.

                   Breakdown of why each person on the APPS is prohibited  
                from possessing a firearm.

                   Number of contacts made during the APPS enforcement  
                efforts.


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                   Information regarding task forces or collaboration  
                with local law enforcement on reducing the APPS backlog.  

                   The reason for the individual to have been included on  
                the APPS list.

           1. Sunsets the above reporting requirements on March 1, 2019.

           2. Makes a series of declarations and findings, including:

                   "California is the first and only state in the nation  
                to establish an automated system for tracking handgun and  
                assault weapon owners who might fall into a prohibited  
                status.  The online database, which is currently known as  
                the APPS, cross-references all handgun and assault weapon  
                owners across the state against criminal history records  
                to determine persons who have been, or will become,  
                prohibited from possessing a firearm subsequent to the  
                legal acquisition or registration of a firearm or assault  
                weapon."

                   "The list of armed prohibited persons in California  
                grows by about 15 to 20 people per day.  There are  
                currently more than 20,000 armed prohibited persons in  
                California.  Collectively, these individuals are believed  
                to be in possession of over 39,000 handguns and 1,670  
                assault weapons.  Neither the Department of Justice nor  
                local law enforcement has sufficient resources to  
                confiscate the enormous backlog of weapons, nor can they  
                keep up with the daily influx of newly prohibited  
                persons."

           Prior legislation  .  SB 819 (Leno, Chapter 743, Statutes of 2011)  
          provided that the DOJ may use DROS funds for costs associated  
          with its firearms-related regulatory and enforcement activities  
          regarding the possession as well as the sale, purchase, loan, or  
          transfer of firearms, as specified.

           FISCAL EFFECT  :    Appropriation:  Yes   Fiscal Com.:  Yes    
          Local:  No

          According to the Senate Budget and Fiscal Review Committee: 

          This bill appropriates $24 million from the DROS special account  

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          to the DOJ for firearms-related regulatory and enforcement  
          activities. 

          The funding in this bill is intended to supplement, not  
          supplant, the $22.9 million from the DROS Special Account  
          included in the 2013-14 Budget Act to be utilized by the DOJ. 

          This bill does not specify a period that the appropriation shall  
          be available for encumbrance.  In accordance with Government  
          Code Section 16340, this appropriation is available for three  
          years after the date upon which it first became available for  
          encumbrance.

           SUPPORT  :   (Verified  4/18/13)

          Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General 
          AFSCME
          Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence
          California District Attorneys Association
          California Medical Association
          California Statewide Law Enforcement Association
          Chief Probation Officers of California
          City of Los Angeles
          Coalition Against Gun Violence
          County of Los Angeles
          Peace Officers Research Association of California 
          Violence Prevention Coalition
          Women Against Gun Violence

           OPPOSITION  :    (Verified  4/18/13)

          California Association of Firearms Retailers
          California Rifle and Pistol Association
          California Sportsman's Lobby, Inc.
          Crossroads of the West Gun Shows
          National Rifle Association of America
          National Shooting Sports Foundation
          Outdoor Sportsmen's Coalition of California
          Safari Club International

           ARGUMENTS IN SUPPORT  :    According to the DOJ:

            Because of a lack of resources, there are currently more than  
            20,000 armed prohibited persons statewide, including dangerous  

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            felons, violent misdemeanor offenders and individuals who have  
            been adjudicated mentally ill.  These individuals are believed  
            to hold up to 39,140 handguns and 1,679 assault weapons.   
            Every year there are an additional 3,000 prohibited person  
            added to the list.  Despite their best efforts, local and  
            state law enforcement agencies do not have the funding or  
            resources to keep up with this influx.

            For the vision of APPS to be fully realized, more resources  
            are necessary-SB 140 provides those resources.  Specifically,  
            SB 140 will appropriate 24 million dollars in surplus special  
            fund money (Dealers Record of Sale Account) to DOJ, for the  
            specific purpose of hiring more staff to go out and take  
            firearms away from people who cannot legally have them.  To  
            this end, SB 140 will help make communities safer by providing  
            funding to take the preventative step of removing firearms  
            from known, dangerous individuals.

           
          ARGUMENTS IN OPPOSITION  :    The National Shooting Sports  
          Foundation, Inc. (NSSF) writes:

            While NSSF supports the objective of removing firearms from  
            possession of those on the Armed Prohibited Persons List, we  
            strongly oppose the use of the Dealers Record of Sale (DROS)  
            funds for this purpose.

            There does, in fact, need to be substantive ongoing  
            improvements in how the prohibited persons list is  
            administered by the Department if it is to be an effective  
            tool in keeping firearms out of the hands of those prohibited  
            from possessing them. 

            The behavior of criminals and others that has resulted in them  
            being placed on the prohibited persons list, and the new  
            prohibited list problems created by those released early from  
            incarceration, or not charged with a serious crime because of  
            AB 109 (Budget Committee, Chapter 15, Statutes of 2011),  
            should not be made the financial responsibility of lawful  
            payers of DROS fees.

            Given the foregoing, a different source of funding should be  
            found for SB 140.  If a source other than DROS fees is used,  
            NSSF could support the bill.  

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           ASSEMBLY FLOOR  :  65-10, 4/18/13
          AYES:  Achadjian, Alejo, Allen, Ammiano, Atkins, Bloom,  
            Blumenfield, Bocanegra, Bonilla, Bonta, Bradford, Brown,  
            Buchanan, Ian Calderon, Campos, Chau, Chesbro, Conway, Cooley,  
            Daly, Dickinson, Eggman, Fong, Fox, Frazier, Garcia, Gatto,  
            Gomez, Gordon, Gorell, Gray, Hagman, Hall, Harkey, Roger  
            Hernández, Jones-Sawyer, Levine, Linder, Maienschein, Medina,  
            Mitchell, Morrell, Mullin, Muratsuchi, Nazarian, Nestande,  
            Olsen, Pan, Perea, V. Manuel Pérez, Quirk, Quirk-Silva,  
            Rendon, Salas, Skinner, Stone, Ting, Torres, Wagner, Weber,  
            Wieckowski, Wilk, Williams, Yamada, John A. Pérez
          NOES:  Bigelow, Chávez, Dahle, Donnelly, Beth Gaines, Grove,  
            Jones, Melendez, Patterson, Waldron
          NO VOTE RECORDED: Holden, Logue, Lowenthal, Mansoor, Vacancy


          JG:k  4/19/13   Senate Floor Analyses 

                           SUPPORT/OPPOSITION:  SEE ABOVE

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