News release from CCRKBA:
BELLEVUE, WA – The Citizens Committee for the Right to Keep and Bear Arms, in conjunction with the New Jersey Firearms Owners Syndicate and National Rifle Association Institute for Legislative Action, is celebrating the 12th New Jersey municipality to pass a permit-to-carry fee rebate resolution.
A grassroots movement which began over the summer is spreading across the Garden State. On Nov. 25, Howell, N.J. joined 11 other towns in refunding their citizens’ permit-to-carry fees.
Post-Bruen, New Jersey lawmakers imposed additional and onerous fees to their permit-to-carry application process. A $50 fee was allocated to a victims compensation fund (since found unconstitutional by the U.S. 3rd Circuit Court of Appeals) and $150 to local municipalities. Englishtown was the first in the state to pass a resolution refunding the $150 fee back to applicants. The Howell council unanimously (with one member absent) resolved to refund $125 of its portion of the fee.
“There are now a dozen municipalities in the Garden State that have decided to respect the rights of their citizens by not imposing onerous fees on them to exercise a constitutional right,” said CCRKBA Chairman Alan Gottlieb. “As more towns resolve that the law passed by the New Jersey legislature is unconstitutional, it weakens the grip the anti-liberty forces have on the people. We’re proud of the grassroots efforts of our members and the members of our partners — the NRA-ILA and NJFOS — in this fight.”
In addition to Howell and Englishtown, the following municipalities have also nullified their permitting fees: Beachwood, Butler, Dumont, Franklin Borough, Hardyston, Hopatcong, Medford Lakes, and Vernon. Cresskill and Readington passed ordinances, not just resolutions.
Howell Councilman Ian Nadel, who led the effort, observed, “The Second Amendment is the only Amendment that seems to be under repeated attack, especially in the state of New Jersey.”
Over $125,000 per year in exorbitant and unconstitutional fees have been eliminated for nearly 200,000 New Jerseyans with the passage of this resolution.
If you’re interested in raising a permit-to-carry rebate resolution in your jurisdiction, reach out to our boots-on-the-ground partners at NJFOS HERE. A copy of the joint policy brief with model resolution can be found HERE.
Unless they opened up varmint season on the New Jersey politicians, I’m not sure why anyone would want to live or even visit there. But some people claim to have compelling reasons. So, I’m happy some of them are a baby step closer to having their right to keep and bear arms respected.
Considering them giving you some money back on the chance that if you jump through all the right flaming hoops. You can exercise your rights?
OK.
They judicially passed child-murder-dismemberment in the 60’s. And started saleing the body parts for research shortly thereafter.
Murder for fun and profit.
Ya, baby steps ain’t going to get you there.
But hey, I guess a win is a win.
Do they refund the money if you don’t receive a permit?
All that time and money to exercise a right protected by the Constitution? How nice.
If they thought they could get away with it they’d apply similarly onerous (and odious) fees to exercise the rights of speech, the press, religion, peaceable assembly, and petitioning the government for redress. Want reasonable privacy for your dwelling and your papers? There’s a fee. No double Jeopardy or cruel and unusual punishment? There’s a fee for that. The Poll Tax will return, because the Amendment for THAT doesn’t apply to state and local elections. The Third Amendment has been a dead letter for 238 years, but if a fee can be collected for receiving protection from foreign invasion, who cares where the soldier is quartered? Fire protection in the Colonies used to be by subscription and if they couldn’t see your medallion on your house, it didn’t matter if you paid or not (we had a case on that in Contracts Law many long years ago).