Georgia does it as well. And also they give free drivers licenses to veterans with a notation on the DL that the’re veterans which allows them discounts at certain stores. Here in WA veterans have to pay extra for veteran’s plates and no free anything from the state which is typical since it’s even more liberal than OR.
>Encouraging Veterans to carry is good policy. This is a good first step.
Some animals are more equal than others....Restoration of Constitutional Rights for ALL.
That would have saved me $200.
$100 for the mandatory class, which I didn’t need, and the $100 fee for the permit from the county sheriff.
Retired Vets have always had their own guns here up`n the mountains.
Retired Veterans Led the First Charge at the Battle Plattsburgh 1814
Over 700 retired Revolutionary War Veterans drilled in Streetroad, Ticonderoga NY, had to retreat back down the Vineyard Rd. in the face of a pack of wolves, waited til the wolves left, then marched 60 miles to to Plattsburgh.
“These later fought as 30 volunteers and 700 Essex and Clinton [counties] militia at the Battle of Plattsburgh where they led the first charge at the British.”
“1814 September 4: 700 Militia [with their own weapons] rallied from Essex and Clinton [rallied] counties [NY] had assembled at Plattsburgh and were immediately placed on the front line first picket. They attacked the British first across the river [in their rear], not waiting for the U.S. Army regulars to decide what to do.
Crockett, p.268 , Crockett, Wm. H., “A History of Lake Champlain”. Hubart J. Shanley & Co., 1909, Crown Collection, New York State Library *
“The Pictorial Field-book of the War of 1812: Or, Illustrations, by Pen and ...”
By Benson John Lossing 1868
pp.862,874
Watson, Winslow Cossoul, “The Military and Civil History of the County of Essex, New York”, Munsell, Albany, NY 1869, page 3
This is less than it seems. To me, it reads that the law only applies to military retirees, and on a military pension, and not to all veterans who happen to be retired.
You can bet the commie tyrant in New York won’t be doing anything like this.
While it seems that *some* veterans benefit from this, the costs to their rights seems to be far higher than the benefits.
First, it is discriminatory, in that there is no reason to require permits from the legal general public, added to which it requires *disabled* veterans to still buy a permit. It was not well thought out, in that it does not distinguish between all the different forms of disability.
Second, it opens the door to a Sheriff being able to not only easily revoke a license, not just on conviction or arrest, but on “suspicion” by the Sheriff, and they are under threat: “Should the retired veteran refuse to return the pistol permit within the 30-day limit and continue to carry the handgun, he or she shall be
guilty of carrying a weapon without a license or carrying a
concealed weapon, whichever might be the case.”
As far as the composition of the law, why doesn’t it refer back to the policy used for the general public if their license is revoked?
The more I read this law, the less I like it.
This is good. I don’t mind paying for my permit, but I am glad the veteran retirees get theirs for free. Even if my state goes permitless (and I think it will), I will still carry an Alabama permit for purposes of reciprocity.