{"id":99179,"date":"2023-05-13T21:30:00","date_gmt":"2023-05-14T05:30:00","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/gun-legislation-gets-short-notice-hearing-on-mothers-day\/"},"modified":"2023-05-14T18:13:09","modified_gmt":"2023-05-15T02:13:09","slug":"gun-legislation-gets-short-notice-hearing-on-mothers-day","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/www.juneauempire.com\/news\/gun-legislation-gets-short-notice-hearing-on-mothers-day\/","title":{"rendered":"Gun legislation gets short-notice hearing on Mother’s Day"},"content":{"rendered":"
A bill removing limits on some gun sales was advanced during a Mother’s Day hearing scheduled on less than a day’s notice by the Senate Judiciary Committee — to the ire of several mothers who called to testify — but changes the committee made to narrow the bill’s scope also drew plenty of furious public comments.<\/p>\n
The timing also raised questions about motives behind the sudden movement of the bill sponsored by House Speaker Cathy Tilton, a Wasilla Republican, including whether it might be a trade to also advance a bill by the judiciary committee chair allowing involuntary commitment in psychiatric facilities<\/a> of certain people that’s stalled in a House committee.<\/p>\n Lawmakers involved in both bills and Sunday’s hearing denied a trade was involved, stating each proposal has enough support to advance on their own merits.<\/p>\n “There’s no trade,” said Sen. Matt Claman, chair of the Senate Judiciary Committee and sponsor of Senate Bill 53<\/a> that allows the involuntary commitments. “At the end of the session we all try to move forward.”<\/p>\n Claman’s bill is currently in the House Judiciary Committee and, following a failed House floor vote Friday to have the bill removed from that <\/a>committee<\/a>, a member of the House’s Republican-led majority told the Anchorage Daily News “it will get out of that committee, one way or another.” The committee is chaired by Rep. Sarah Vance, a Homer Republican, who was among a few legislators in the audience during Sunday’s hearing on Tilton’s bill. Vance is among the bill’s 19 co-sponsors in the House.<\/p>\n The scrutiny of both bills comes only a few days before the scheduled adjournment of the session on Wednesday, with both House and Senate leaders saying their differences remain so significant on the main order of business — the budget — that a special session appears inevitable.<\/p>\n