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At Colorado’s Capitol, Some Lawmakers Bring Their Guns To Work

Bente Birkeland
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Capitol Coverage
A security checkpoint at the Colorado Capitol on Monday, Feb. 26, 2018.

Colorado’s Capitol, like 28 other statehouses across the country, has security checkpoints at public entrances. There are metal detectors that visitors and lobbyists must pass through under the watchful eyes of State Patrol officers, who are there to protect everyone in the building and keep illegal guns and other weapons out. But for some, the security is too much.

“It’s easier to get on an airplane than it is to get into the people’s Capitol,” said longtime lobbyist Mike Beasley, who often has to empty the contents of his pockets to go through security because he leaves and returns several times a day.

And the routine for all visitors, including Beasley, just got longer. For the first time this year, officers at the checkpoints are requiring people to remove their belts. Sometimes Beasley and others are late for meetings because of the long lines. The State Patrol said a change in command has led to a strict adherence to its safety policies.

Beasley is one of the supporters of Senate Bill 18-116, which would create an airport-style pre-check system so that frequent visitors can bypass the security gates after getting a background check. That's already been done in a handful of other states.

“We’re out of balance in terms of security requirements and public safety,” he said.

There's already one group already can glide through without security hassles: lawmakers, who can enter the Capitol elsewhere, using a card through secure doors. Moreover, several lawmakers bring their guns to the Capitol, carrying concealed weapons under a state law that allows people to do so in their place of business. However there is a conflicting statute that says concealed weapon permit holders are not allowed to carry inside the Capitol.

Credit Colorado House of Representatives
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Colorado House of Representatives
Rep. Lori Saine

Rep. Lori Saine, R-Firestone, said she regularly carries a concealed gun. She sees carrying it as a measure of self-defense as well as a way to protect others.

“I feel very secure here,” Saine said of the Capitol, adding that other lawmakers she knows carry concealed guns at the Capitol, too. “Of course a lot of members in our caucus, on our side, carry. I’m very comfortable in my leadership meeting, by the way, because everybody is armed there.”

In December Saine was at the center of a debate over Second Amendment rights after she was arrested at a security checkpoint at Denver International Airport with a loaded gun. Ultimately prosecutors dropped the case , and essentially said Saine made an innocent mistake and did not intend to violate federal laws on  transporting firearms.

“I’m like thousands of people across the U.S. that grabbed the wrong bag and that’s what happened,” Saine said. “The weapon was never outside my area of control other than when I put it in the scanner. The important thing is you do need to keep the weapon under your control at all times.”

That hasn’t always happened inside the Capitol. Four years ago, a state lawmaker accidentally left his gun unattended in a committee room after a hearing let out and Rep. Jonathan Singer found it.

“Where you enter a government building where there are heated vigorous debates and people are on edge, and sleep deprived and, let’s be honest, there are people in this building who are drinking, that can be a deadly mix,” Singer, D-Longmont said.

The Capitol added security checkpoints in 2007 when an armed man threatened Gov. Bill Ritter. Officers shot and killed the man.

That incident and the many shootings in the news make some lawmakers hesitant to consider any security changes.

“We have seen an increase of mass shootings both at schools and public places and when we’re on the floor, with balconies [overlooking us], we’re sitting targets,” said Rep. Faith Winter, D-Westminster. “This session is especially tense. It’s an election year so it’s hyper partisan. There’s a lot of sexual harassment claims.”

Winter is among those to complain about sexual harassment. She has filed a formal complaint against a fellow Democrat in the House. Three Republican senators have faced separate complaints. 

“In this moment, it’s a perfect storm of a cultural shift, a lot of tension, and then lobbyists pushing a bill to decrease security and that doesn’t make any sense to me,” said Rep. Alec Garnett, D-Denver.

Guns are at the center of many fears but they are also a notoriously heated issue in Colorado. Democrats passed stricter gun laws after the Aurora Theater Shooting in 2012 and that led to efforts to recall two Democratic lawmakers (both successful).

As for the Colorado State Patrol, it does not support the effort to allow frequent capitol visitors to bypass security and issued a statement: “Current security protocol is a best practice based upon lessons from past and current security events.  These events have demonstrated the need for complete and thorough screening of all visitors to the Capitol Complex.”

The bill is sponsored by three lawmakers in both chambers, including Sen. John Cooke, R-Greeley, a retired sheriff.

Capitol Coverage is a collaborative public policy reporting project, providing news and analysis to communities across Colorado for more than a decade. Fifteen public radio stations participate in Capitol Coverage from throughout Colorado.

Bente Birkeland has been reporting on state legislative issues for KUNC and Rocky Mountain Community Radio since 2006. Originally, from Minnesota, Bente likes to hike and ski in her spare time. She keeps track of state politics throughout the year but is especially busy during the annual legislative session from January through early May.
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