Dear Neighbor, Thank you to everyone who showed up to participate in local precinct caucus meetings on Tuesday. It was great to see so many people engaged and passionate about our communities, state and nation. Grass-roots involvement is crucial to our representative republic and it’s great to see people are taking stock. State economic forecast State officials issued a new economic forecast Thursday, with a looming $1.5 billion shortfall through 2027 overshadowing a $3.715 billion surplus for the current biennium. This highlights the fact a more balanced approach is needed in St. Paul. The state had a record surplus last year, and the Legislature should have put as many of those dollars as possible back in the pockets of taxpayers. Instead, the one-party control spent the $17.5 billion surplus and even took $10 billion more from taxpayers in order to send state spending skyrocketing by 40 percent. And Minnesota businesses are still on the hook for an unnecessary $15 million tax hit because the majority has refused to correct a simple mistake it made in last year’s tax bill. This approach is reckless and unaffordable, and it clearly is not working. We need more balance in St. Paul to better respect the hardworking taxpayers in our state and pave the way to a more prosperous future. It’s time to start honoring promises the majority party made to fully eliminate the tax on Social Security, deliver the $2,000 rebate checks and completely fix the errors they made in last year’s tax bill. The state is fully funded for the current two-year cycle, meaning no additional state spending is necessary this session. The new bottom line will guide legislators through supplemental fiscal considerations the rest of the 2024 session. District 14A visitors Thank you to St. Cloud Fire Chief Matt Love (pictured above) and the MN State Fire Department Association for the input provided in a recent meeting, and to the Davis family (below) for stopping by my House office. It’s always great to receive in-person feedback from the people I represent. |
Anti-Second Amendment bills I mentioned in an email earlier this week that House committee hearings were taking place for two anti-Second Amendment bills. The bills are H.F. 601 – Her, 48-hour deadline for reporting for lost and stolen firearms; and H.F. 4300 – Becker-Finn, regarding firearm storage. Both proposals seem to do more to criminalize good-faith, law-abiding gun owners than to crack down on the repeat criminals and other true bad actors our courts continue putting back on the street. The Democrat majority moved both bills to the next step in the committee process, which keeps them viable for enactment this session. Rep. Her’s bill puts the onus on the victim of a crime to file a report to law enforcement within the government’s definition of reasonable time – 48 hours. If you are the victim of a firearm theft, and the perpetrator of that crime commits another crime with your stolen weapon, the bill stipulates that you may be held responsible. Rep. Becker-Finn’s bill requires a person to either store a firearm not in the person’s direct control in a safe or unloaded with a locking device. On the same day the DFL introduced this bill that makes it a crime if a law-abiding firearm owner does not unload a firearm and secure it with a locking device in the person’s home, the DFL also introduced a bill (HF4277) that repeals mandatory minimum sentences for violent crimes involving the possession or use of a firearm. These increased penalties come in a context where the actual perpetrators of such crimes are increasingly released back out onto the street under laws passed by Democrats in 2023 … and bills they continue pushing today. It is misguided to crack down on gun owners who honor our laws and act in good faith instead of going after the real criminals. I am a strong Second Amendment supporter and view these bills as diluting our constitutional rights. These latest two proposals are on top of new laws one-party control enacted last year regarding universal background checks and red flag confiscation orders. And there are more of these anti-Second Amendment bills just waiting in the wings at the Capitol. We need a better approach. In fact, I am co-authoring legislation to increase penalties for so-called “straw purchases” where someone who is eligible to purchase a firearm purchases one for someone whose criminal status prohibits them from doing so. This is the type of illegal arrangement appears to have played a role in the recent killings of two police officers and a firefighter medic in Burnsville. The bill we propose is part of the real solution for cracking down on gun runners without infringing on law-abiding citizens. Burnsville memorial I attended the memorial service for the three Burnsville heroes who recently were killed in the line of duty. Officer Matthew Ruge, Officer Paul Elmstrand, and Firefighter/Paramedic Adam Finseth gave their lives to save others, and the service to honor them this week was quite moving. There reportedly were around 10,000 people in attendance, and it was very humbling for me to attend, invited into the personal lives of those close to the three heroes we lost so senselessly. God bless these three men, their families, and their co-workers. On the radar The House next week may vote on legislation to fix the school resource officer issue that has arose after new law enacted by Democrats caused SROs to be removed in a number of schools around our state last fall. Stay tuned. Important links Until next time, here are some links to help you follow developments in St. Paul this session:
Please Contact MeIt’s an honor and privilege to work for you at the Capitol. Don’t hesitate to contact my office at any time this session to share your thoughts, concerns or ideas. You can call me at 651-296-6316, or email me at rep.bernie.perryman@house.mn.gov. I am here to serve you! Bernie |