Senate Passes Resolution (SJR 3) Supporting NPS Regulation
Allowing Park Users to Carry Concealed Weapons
JUNEAU – The Alaska State Senate today unanimously passed a resolution (SJR 3) commending the National Park Service and former President George Bush for adopting a regulation allowing park users who have state-issued concealed carry permits to carry a concealed firearm in national parks. The resolution also urges the present administration of Barack Obama to continue the rule and improve on it by allowing weapons to be carried openly.
After it took effect on January 9, the rule was challenged by environmental and gun control groups, resulting in a preliminary injunction stopping its implementation.
“Our expression of support for this rule through SJR 3 becomes ever more important and pertinent with the decision of the federal court to issue a preliminary injunction,” said Sen. Gene Therriault, R-North Pole, the prime sponsor of SJR 3. “We want the Obama administration to fight to defend the rule, which could mean the difference between life and death to a park user in extremely remote and wild areas of Alaska.”
Therriault noted that current federal park rules allow a handgun to be taken into a park, but it must be disassembled, unloaded, and kept where it is not readily accessible to the user. “The new rule is based on the logic that if a hiker is already allowed to carry a concealed weapon on most public land, there is no reason to deny them the same level of personal protection in federal parks. Carrying around an unassembled, unloaded gun in the Denali backcountry is not going to be of much use if you are suddenly charged by a bear,” Therriault said.
The groups that challenged the rule in federal court argued that the government had not gone through the process of generating an environmental analysis. The federal government defended the rule by pointing out that it did not authorize any environmental impacts, so there was no need for an environmental analysis.
SJR 3 will next go to the State House of Representatives for its consideration. After passage by the House, the resolution will be sent to President Obama, the leaders of Congress, and Alaska’s delegation in Congress. # # #
