Gun laws across the US states are undergoing changes in 2025, with many states strengthening gun safety laws while others have expanded the rights of firearm owners, reflecting the polarization on the issue of gun control in the country, writes Sean Nolan for Jurist.
While new laws taking effect January 1, 2025 in California,
Colorado, New York, Delaware and Minnesota have focused on increasing gun
control in various ways, laws in New Hampshire and Kentucky have expanded in
favor of strengthening the right to own and use firearms. Legislation enacted
during 2024 in South
Carolina and Louisiana that legalized open carry without a permit
further paints a picture of a country moving in two different directions.
In California, several laws are taking effect,
including AB1483, AB1598, and AB2917. New rules include the strengthening of limitations
pertaining to the purchase of handguns, including consumer warnings on firearm
sales, and creating guidance for courts when considering restraining orders
related to gun violence. New York has enacted a similar law to California’s,
requiring consumer warnings when purchasing firearms.
Colorado’s new law requires gun owners who store their
weapon in an unoccupied vehicle to do so in a locked out-of-view hard-sided
container. Colorado also increased training requirements for concealed carry
permits while prohibiting particular misdemeanor offenders from obtaining the
permits. The new concealed carry laws will go into effect later this year in
July.
Meanwhile, New Hampshire’s new gun laws for 2025 bar employers from preventing employee storage of
firearms in locked vehicles, and increase privacy protections for gun owners.
The new Kentucky law similarly increases privacy protections by prohibiting use
of merchant category codes for firearms dealers. The codes are used to help
financial institution track where a purchase is made from but do not
necessarily detail what is being bought.
In 2022, President Joe Biden signed the Bipartisan Safer Communities Act, which represented the
first comprehensive gun reform bill undertaken by Congress in 30 years. The
bill expanded background checks and restrictions on who can own a gun but fell
short of the goals set by progressive lawmakers. Last year the
administration issued an
executive order intended to reduce gun violence, and in July the Department of
Justice expanded firearms
background check requirements for gun dealers.
With the pro-gun Trump administration, Republican majority
Congress, and a gun rights friendly US Supreme Court, the country
stands to face a potential reckoning over the widening gap in the treatment of
gun violence and safety issues across the nation.
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