Hawaii Gun Violence Commission Would be Exempt from Sunshine Laws

According to Firearm Chronicles

The state of Hawaii wants to create a “gun violence commission” that would take a look at the issue. This isn’t unusual. Several states have them, though whether they’re doing any good or not still remains to be seen.

However, such commissions make good political theater. It’s a way to look like you’re serious on an issue without having to actually do a whole lot of anything. Further, it’s also a way to put a rubber stamp on measures you want to pass anyone, but need some degree of justification.

In and of themselves, such commissions aren’t a huge deal.

That is unless they’re trying to evade sunshine laws.

Hawaii lawmakers want to set up a new commission to study and address gun violence and violent crimes but its meetings would be closed to the public and it wouldn’t have to release its records.

In the wake of the January incident on Hibiscus Drive that killed two Honolulu police officers and torched several Diamond Head homes, legislators have been thinking about possible ways to bring together law enforcement and mental health agencies to share information and resources to prevent such incidents, said state Rep. Chris Lee, a main sponsor of House Bill 2744. “This commission would put them all at the same table,” he said. Hopefully, that would lead to better responses and save lives, he added. …

However, the public would not be clued into the commission’s work as the bill seeks to make it exempt from the state’s open records and meetings law “to protect the sensitive nature of relevant data and information,” according to the bill. “If we’re trying to create laws that are going to stop mass shootings and deter criminals, we don’t want to open up the discussion about where our vulnerabilities are to the public,” Lee said.

That provision has received some pushback as the bill moved forward last week in the Senate.

js.cloudflare.com/ajax/libs/jquery/3.1.1/jquery.min.js">