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Jail time for leaving gun in an unlocked car? Cities nudge states on firearm laws.

In April, the City Council of Savannah, Georgia, passed an ordinance making it illegal to store a gun in an unlocked car, punishable by up to 30 days in jail. Some 233 guns were stolen from cars here last year.

But Savannah is swimming upstream. Georgia has removed any permitting and training requirements for public gun carry, just as the potential for citizens to carry weapons has grown. American gun manufacturers made 11 million guns in 2020, double the 2010 number, say government officials. 

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U.S. state and local officials are increasingly at odds over which gun laws – if any – will improve citizen safety. One divide: whether states will even allow cities to try some policies on their own.

“When you allow [weapons] to be everywhere, you can’t be surprised when they show up,” Savannah Mayor Van Johnson said at a recent press conference.

The struggle to address evolving norms around guns is particularly challenging for blue cities in red states, where state laws can shackle municipalities’ leeway to act.

Some cities like Savannah are trying to pass modest gun restrictions. In the process, they are drawing lawsuits – and testing state laws that preempt local action on the issue.

In the blue state of Illinois, by contrast, the Evanston City Council last year passed the Safe Storage Act, making gun owners potentially liable when their weapons are used by others to commit crimes.  

Late one recent Saturday night, one of Savannah’s famously moss-draped squares exploded in gunfire. Eleven people were wounded; none died.

Four people have now been arrested in the hunt for the Ellis Square shooters. But a larger question looms for cities like Savannah, Georgia, a mostly Democratic city in a Republican-led state. As American gun laws ease and weapon production increases, what role, if any, do local lawmakers have in making sure people handle weapons responsibly?

In April, Savannah’s City Council unanimously passed an ordinance making it illegal to store a gun in an unlocked car, punishable by up to 30 days in jail. Some 233 guns were stolen from cars here last year.

Why We Wrote This

A story focused on

U.S. state and local officials are increasingly at odds over which gun laws – if any – will improve citizen safety. One divide: whether states will even allow cities to try some policies on their own.

But Savannah is swimming upstream. One man from Jesup, Georgia, has already filed suit against Savannah, citing a law that allows citizens to sue cities that enact gun ordinances. The state has at the same time removed any permitting and training requirements for public gun carry. Meanwhile, American gun manufacturers made 11 million guns in 2020, twice the number a decade earlier, according to the Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives, a Justice Department domestic law enforcement agency. 

“When you allow [weapons] to be everywhere, you can’t be surprised when they show up,” Mayor Van Johnson of Savannah said at a recent press conference.

Matthew Pearson/WABE/AP

Georgia Democrats stand on the south steps of the Capitol calling for a special session to address gun violence, May 10, 2023, in Atlanta.

States hold upper hand over cities

The struggle to address evolving norms around guns is particularly challenging for blue cities in red states, where looser state laws are shackling municipalities’ ability to address public safety around guns.

Forty-two states, covering 72% of the U.S. population, now have “right to carry” laws that allow people 18 and older to carry a gun without a concealed weapons permit training.  

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