Log in to WRAL.com with one click using your favorite social network:
OR
Log in using your WRAL.com account:



Wrong email/password combination.

Forgot password?

Register with WRAL.com using your favorite social network:
OR
Register for a WRAL.com account using our web form.

2:52 a.m. • 6-18-13

Weather Forecast for Raleigh

  • Today: Thunderstorm.
    • Hi: 82° F
  • Wed: Thunderstorm.
    • Hi: 82° F
  • Thu: Partly Cloudy.
    • Hi: 83° F

Other Locations

> 7 Day Forecast

Doppler Image
@NCCapitol
Pro-gun measures moving through legislature
print friendly

Gun bill would allow restaurant carry, make permit holders confidential information

Published: 2013-01-30 12:01:00
Updated: 2013-01-30 14:00:10

The first firearms-related measure to be filed this session would allow concealed handgun permit holders to bring their guns into restaurants where alcohol is served.

House Bill 17, "Gun Permits/Restaurants & Confidentiality," would also remove information regarding who has a concealed handgun permits from the list of information government collects that is a public record.

The lead sponsor on the measure if Rep. Justin Burr, R-Stanly. 

"A great majority of states already permit that," Burr said of the restaurant carry provision. "I believe the more locations a concealed carry permit holders are able to carry their weapon versus leaving it in a vehicle, the better."

Gun rights advocates pushed for a restaurant carry bill last session, saying that establishments that serve alcohol are spots where law abiding gun owners are vulnerable to criminals. Also last year, WRAL News used limited information from the concealed handgun database to allow users to look up how many permit holders lived on their street.

Asked about the public information provision of the bill, Burr said it has been a concern of his for some time.

"When I first elected four years ago, I remember getting an email from some random person that sent me all of my information they were able to get off the concealed weapons permit holder database," Burr said.

Currently, the state Department of Justice will make the database available to anyone who requests it. The database includes home address, phone numbers, physical descriptors and other information. 

Burr said that gun permits were different from other sorts of permits, such as county registries of who owns what car or real estate.

"I don't see that as necessarily being a right," Burr said. "There's not an amendment in the constitution saying you have a right to a car or things such as that."

On the Senate side, top leaders say they have not discussed whether any gun-related legislation will move.

"We're not there yet," Sen. Tom Apodaca, R-Henderson, said. "That's neither yea nor nay. We just haven't discussed it."

The gun rights root, Grass Roots North Carolina, plans a rally outside the legislature on Feb. 5. Among other things, the group has called for state law to be changed so that teachers with concealed handgun permits could carry weapons to the classroom.

Top legislative leaders have said that gun issues were not a top priority for lawmakers this year.

"I'm not one who thinks that arming teachers i the right solution," House Speaker Thom Tillis said Tuesday in response to a question about gun rights legislation. "I think it would be more likely that we would get tougher on anyone who commits a crime who uses a weapon."

Read More Posts from this Blog

65 Comments


WRAL.com welcomes your comments on this story. All comments are moderated prior to publication based on our posting guidelines. Please review them prior to posting and if your message is not approved.

This story is closed for comments. Comments on WRAL.com news stories are accepted and moderated between the hours of 8 a.m. and 8 p.m. Monday through Friday.


page 1 | 2 | 3
<prev    next>
sort order: oldest first | newest first

Why should this electeted officials get to decide? They shoould put it to a vote, and let us decide.

The idea that there is some magic line where on one side you are a responsible law abiding citizen and on the other a danger to the public is ridiculous. Time to end most gun free zones and let the citizenry protect themselves where ever they go.

If alcohol and driving don't mix... I can't possibly see how alcohol and guns would.

Guess I will eat at home. That is what we need, drunks with guns

does alcohol and guns mix? I personally think not....perhaps for non drinking patrons but just picture drunken guys getting into fights pulling their guns out....now if the employees/owner/non drinking patrons were allowed that would be a different story...

A concealed carry permit holder could not have alcohol in his system while carrying a handgun inside a restaurant.

You people do know that concealed carry permit holders are prohibited from having alcohol in their systems. The CCW people are not the ones causing trouble anyway.

Paladin

Really, Then I am sure they will not be drinking. Sarcasam added

North Carolina law prohibits any person from carrying a concealed weapon while "consuming" alcohol. ZERO alcohol in the blood. This will not change. The law, if passed, will allow a person with a concealed carry permit, to have their weapon on their person, while in a restaurant that serves alcohol. NOT in a BAR and not while drinking or drunk. If the restaurant displays a sign prohibiting concealed weapons, the person will still not be allowed to have their weapon on them. This in no way will allow a bunch of drunks to have their guns in a bar.

It is already illegal to carry concealed with any alcohol in your system. So if I am drinking, I don't carry. We just want the right back to carry when not drinking, but at a restaurant that serves alcohol. If someone is going to get drunk and shoot up a place, they are already braking the law. Again, gun control folks want to keep the folks that follow the law in check, not the unlawful.

page 1 | 2 | 3
<prev    next>
sort order: oldest first | newest first

Political Video Picks

 
  • The state House will take up bills eliminating tax checkoff funding for political parties.

  • Former Gov. Jim Holshouser, who died early Monday, was hailed by North Carolina politicians as a decent man who bridged partisan…

  • The North Carolina Chapter of the NAACP gathers for Moral Monday protests on June 17. Chapter president the Rev. William Barber says…

  • President Barack Obama's approval rating dropped 8 percentage points over the last month, and for the first time in his presidency…

  • Who and what is behind the protests at the state legislature, and is anybody listening?

  • U.S. Senator Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) today delivers the Weekly Republican Address, assuring Americans that Senate Republicans "will…