Kansas Town requires residents to get a gun

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Buckskinner33

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Town requires residents to get a gun
Residents who do not comply will be fined $10

GEUDA SPRINGS, Kansas (AP) -- This tiny south-central Kansas community has passed an ordinance requiring most households to have guns and ammunition.

Noncomplying residents would be fined $10 under the ordinance, passed 3-2 earlier this month by City Council members who thought it would help protect the town of 210 people. Those who suffer from physical or mental disabilities, paupers and people who conscientiously oppose firearms would be exempt.

"This ordinance fulfills the duty to protect by allowing each individual householder to provide for his or her protection," said Councilman John Brewer.

"This is simply using the U.S. Constitution -- Second Amendment in particular -- to the city of Geuda Springs' advantage."

Geuda Springs has no local police force; the Sumner County Sheriff's department is responsible for policing the area. Sheriff Gerald Gilkey said the ordinance makes him concerned for the safety of his officers.

"This throws up red flags," he said.

The town's city attorney, Thomas Herlocker, also opposes the measure, which has not taken effect because it has yet to be published. He said he plans to ask the council to reverse itself on the issue. The council meets next on Dec. 1.

Whitney Watson, a spokesman for Attorney General Phill Kline, declined to comment on the legality of such an ordinance, which is similar to one passed in Kennesaw, Georgia, 21 years ago that is still in effect.

Many Geuda Springs residents refused to talk about it, and others were tightlipped, saying outsiders should stay out of it.

"It's nobody's business but our own," said Phillip Russell, who owns a motorcycle shop in the town. "Everybody out of town is making this their business."
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dfndr13

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Salina, Kansas
Geuda gun law goes bye-bye

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GUN LAW -- Mayor Ed Lacey, pictured in the starred cap, has vetoed a resolution to redraft a gun ordinance in Geuda Springs. (Shane T. Farley/Courier)
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By SHANE T. FARLEY
GEUDA SPRINGS — It appears the much-debated gun ordinance in this small Sumner County town is doomed.

Mayor Ed Lacey has vetoed a resolution that ordered a redrafting of the ordinance and a resolution calling for a straw poll to gauge public opinion on the issue, a spokesperson at Geuda Springs’ city hall said this morning.

“All (the mayor) has to do is write down on a piece of paper that he wants to veto a resolution and turn it in at city hall,” city clerk Peggy Terry said. “He can do that at any time and he has already done it” with the gun ordinance.

Geuda Springs city attorney Tom Herlocker said this morning he spoke with Lacey who told Herlocker he wanted to veto any revised ordinance. Without Lacey’s support, the other two council members who favor a gun ordinance would be outnumbered on the five-member council. Four votes would be required to overturn a mayoral veto.

Herlocker said Lacey feels the issue has divided the town.

“He thinks this is the right thing to do,” Herlocker said. “He doesn’t think an ordinance is necessary.”

In November, the council voted 3-2 to require the head of every household in town to own a gun and ammunition “to provide for emergency management of the City.” The ordinance was never published or ratified because council members wanted a legal opinion on the matter from Herlocker.

On Dec. 1, Herlocker told the council that the ordinance they proposed needed work. The council voted to have the Winfield attorney revise the ordinance and present it in February.

In the meantime, the city planned to poll the registered voters in this town of 210 people.

The mayor’s handwritten vetoes are dated Dec. 2, a day after the meeting.

Terry would not say if the vetoes have put an end to discussion on the gun law.

“They could bring it back up at any time,” she said.

http://www.winfieldcourier.com/w031213/Thurs1.html
 
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