Yakima Herald-Republic editorial board
This editorial appears in the Sept. 16, 2009, Yakima
Herald-Republic.
It's hard to fault Yakima's Mayor Dave Edler for trying
to do whatever he can to quell gun violence that during this summer alone has
left nearly two dozen people wounded, including several by random gunfire.
So he signed a pledge, as have more than 450 other
mayors from 40 states across the nation, to find ways to keep illegal guns out
of the hands of criminals, the mentally ill and juveniles.
Nothing wrong with that, right?
Not so fast. The National Rifle Association says the
Mayors Against Illegal Guns, the nonpartisan group that Yakima's mayor joined,
is nothing more than another thinly veiled attempt to limit gun ownership --
this time by trying to regulate private gun shows out of existence.
Yes, the mayor finds himself once again in the
crosshairs of controversy. He's already embroiled in a public debate over what
he considers as too much political partisanship in City Council races and had
earlier been on the losing side of a ballot measure to pay for extra
firefighters and emergency medical personnel.
Now he finds himself the sights of the NRA, and he
doesn't think it's fair.
"It's an issue of law and order and life and death,"
Edler said Monday during a meeting with the news media.
The mayor's quote is lifted directly from a mission
statement written by the organization's co-chairmen, Mayor Michael Bloomberg of
New York and Mayor Thomas Menino of Boston, who also said "the issue of illegal
guns is not conservative or liberal."
To join the group, each mayor is asked to sign a
statement of principles. These goals include punishing to the maximum any
criminal who possesses or traffics in illegal guns, targeting irresponsible gun
dealers who knowingly sell to straw purchasers and opposing any federal law that
restricts cities from accessing gun trace data compiled by the Bureau of
Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives.
The Mayors Against Illegal Guns has also focused on
private gun shows where guns, ammunition and assorted collectibles are bought,
sold and traded. Federal law requires people engaged in interstate firearms
sales or dealing in firearms have a federal firearms license and to conduct
background checks through a nationwide criminal background system. Private
sellers, who make occasional sales within their state, are not required to
conduct a background check or keep records on the transactions.
However, private sellers at gun shows must follow state
laws. Seven states do require background checks. Washington is not one of
them.
Edler agrees with his fellow mayors that private sellers
at gun shows should have to make the same kind of background checks as licensed
gun dealers are required to do. Again, it goes to the core values of the
national mayors' group -- to keep illegal firearms off the streets.
Nine years ago the ATF analyzed more than 1,530
trafficking investigations over a nearly three-year period and found gun shows
to be the second-leading source of illegally diverted guns in the nation. The
No. 1 source was corrupt licensed firearms dealers.
While we stand fully in support of the Constitution's
guarantee of the right of gun ownership, we're deeply weary of NRA members'
almost blind opposition to principled efforts to reduce the number of weapons
that get in the hands of those who are legally banned from owning them.
Rather than having his patriotism questioned, Edler and
mayors like him should be praised for taking aim at a very real problem.
* Members of the Yakima Herald-Republic editorial
board are Michael Shepard, Bob Crider, Spencer Hatton and Karen
Troianello.