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Councilor Pryor found the amendment to be troublesome because it did not provide any way of differentiat- <br />ing between a good person or a person with ill intent carrying a gun. He said unless the amendment could be <br />clearer he could not support it. <br /> <br />Councilor Bettman found both the bill and the amendment to be troublesome. She thought the amendment <br />would allow “the military” to go door to door confiscating weapons. She did not like that it would <br />supercede home rule authority and the ability of the EPD to impose law and order. She added that this was <br />her difficulty with turning over emergency management “to the military.” She hoped the council would <br />reconsider its vote to support “militarizing emergency management.” <br /> <br />Councilor Zelenka noted that the local ordinance did not allow authorities to go into homes and take guns. <br />Mr. Solin affirmed this. He said specifically under emergency circumstances the City could prohibit the <br />sale, the carrying, or the possession of any firearms or explosives of any kind on public streets or in public <br />places. He recalled that when the City passed the emergency code the National Rifle Association had made <br />comments on a national level about the City of Eugene. He said the City had been careful to craft the <br />language so that it was specific to the confiscation of firearms in public places only. <br /> <br />Councilor Zelenka agreed with Councilor Pryor that the amendment could prohibit local officials from <br />taking guns away from vigilantes in such a situation. <br /> <br />Councilor Poling did not agree with the assertion that someone who was breaking the law could not have <br />their gun confiscated. Mr. Solin replied that the police had reviewed the amendment and it had given them <br />concern because it specifically stated that if a person lawfully possessed the firearm it could not be taken <br />away from that individual. He related that the EPD felt the law had the potential to tie the hands of officers <br />in such a situation. <br /> <br />Councilor Clark suggested that someone who was shooting inappropriately would still be subject to arrest. <br />He believed that the greatest degree of home rule was the “primacy of the individual.” He thought this was a <br />“wonderful balance” to the need to “federalize” this particular response. <br /> <br />At Councilor Bettman’s request, Mr. Solin rearticulated Mr. Cushman’s concerns with the language of the <br />amendment. He stated that the way that it was written it could potentially disallow an officer from taking a <br />firearm from someone who lawfully owned it, even if that person was doing something illegal. <br /> <br />In response to a question from Councilor Bettman, Ms. Wilson predicted that there would be a discussion <br />regarding the State’s right to prohibit the federal government from seizing arms in an emergency. She noted <br />that there were a lot of emergency-related bills at present. She said one of the big discussions was what a <br />state of emergency actually meant, as it was not entirely clear and it was not in the bill. <br /> <br />Councilor Bettman asked if there were any other issues of authority that the underlying bill would impact. <br />Mr. Solin responded that the Oregon Wireless Interoperable Network (OWIN) was a program that sought to <br />try to fix the State’s radio systems and the Oregon Military Department did not want the program. He said <br />OWIN was “looking for a new home.” He related that staff was closely watching where OWIN would end <br />up because of local interest in interoperability. He also noted that from an emergency management <br />standpoint, although the Oregon State Police had been diminished by budget cuts, the National Guard’s <br />ability to respond to emergencies had also been diminished because so many of the troops had been sent <br />overseas. <br /> <br /> <br /> <br />MINUTES—Eugene City Council April 9, 2007 Page 15 <br /> Regular Meeting <br /> <br />