If Hurricane Helene was all we had to deal with, that would have been plenty for the year. Unfortunately, now Florida is bracing for Milton, which is expected to reach category four status and then slam into the state.
With all the death and devastation hitting a part of the country that pretty much never has to worry about hurricanes, a lot of stories have gotten lost in the shuffle. We covered the situation in Okeechobee, Florida where the police chief illegally decreed that gun stores must be closed. No one stopped what they were doing because of the decree, mind you, and it wasn't enforced--the chief says it was a mistake that shouldn't have happened--but it was still a thing.
Gov. Ron DeSantis is taking steps to make sure that doesn't happen again.
Florida Gov. Ron DeSantis has issued an emergency declaration ahead of Hurricane Milton that prohibits Emergency Management Director Kevin Guthrie from exercising his authority to suspend or limit gun sales.
The preemption of Guthrie’s authority is unprecedented and even highlighted in the news release that went out with the executive order declaring an emergency:
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Florida law allows the emergency management director to prohibit citizens from carrying guns and selling guns and ammunition during an emergency, but Guthrie has not taken such action as far as available records show.
Except that it doesn't.
It provides for emergency management directors to prohibit the carrying and selling of firearms when there have been acts of violence or defiance of lawful authority. That simply doesn't exist here, so no, Guthrie doesn't actually have the authority to do so. The fact that he hasn't doesn't mean he won't, and after what happened to Okeechobee, well, DeSantis is taking steps to make sure it doesn't happen this time.
"But this is unprecedented!" the writers declare.
Sure, it's unprecedented, but that's because no one figured they needed to spell it out specifically before. Prior to Okeechobee, no one in Florida thought that someone would try to prohibit the lawful carry of a firearm or the sale of one in the lead-up to a hurricane. Sure, I could see them doing it during a riot or some kind of uprising, but for a storm?
Yet someone did, and DeSantis clearly wants to make sure there's not a repeat.
Yes, officials said it was a mistake, that they didn't mean to sign any such order and it was never enforced, and so on. That doesn't mean someone else won't try to do it simply because they don't like guns.
I don't think Guthrie would do so--he was appointed to his job by DeSantis, so, probably, he's not exactly a gun control enthusiast--but this also shields him from criticism if something goes sideways and someone gets shot during the storm or the immediate aftermath. It's unlikely we'll see widespread violence or anything, but we also know how the news media gets.
No, DeSantis did the right thing and media hysterics are nothing but an attempt to try and pretend this is something that it's not.
People need to be able to buy guns right up until the stores close because the stores' management decides its time to close. DeSantis making sure there's no repeat of Helene and Okeechobee is just good sense.
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