Ohio Bill Targets Local Gun Bans
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Ohio Bill Targets Local Gun Bans
Ohio lawmakers are considering legislation that would let gun owners sue cities and counties that pass illegal firearm restrictions, with violating municipalities facing punitive damages.
Why it matters: The bill would give individual citizens the financial leverage to challenge well-funded municipal legal teams that knowingly violate state preemption law.
- Cities currently face little consequence for passing illegal gun ordinances, even when they lose in court
- Punitive damages would create actual deterrence against municipal overreach
- The measure addresses the "patchwork" problem where gun owners face different rules crossing county lines
What's happening: Senate Bill 278 gets its committee hearing Tuesday in the Senate Local Government Committee.
- The bill allows individuals to seek punitive or exemplary damages against municipalities that "knowingly enact" illegal local gun control measures
- Current state law already preempts local firearm regulation, but enforcement has been weak
- Similar accountability measures exist in Florida, where local officials can face $5,000 fines and removal from office
The big picture: Ohio joins a broader push for stronger preemption enforcement across gun-friendly states.
- Florida recently moved forward with Senate Bill 1748, expanding liability protections for the firearm industry
- 43 states had firearm preemption laws as of 2019, with Texas, Wyoming, and others strengthening theirs since then
- States without preemption like Illinois and Indiana create legal minefields where magazine restrictions vary by municipality
Between the lines: The real target isn't rural counties—it's urban areas that keep testing preemption boundaries.
- Large metropolitan areas have historically opposed firearm preemption, citing urban-rural differences
- Municipal attorneys often advise that illegal ordinances are worth the political risk since enforcement is toothless
- The threat of personal financial liability would change that calculation
What this means for you: If passed, SB 278 would create uniform firearm laws statewide and eliminate the risk of accidentally violating local ordinances.
- Gun owners wouldn't need to research municipal codes before traveling within Ohio
- Legal certainty replaces the current system where crossing city limits can create criminal liability
- Citizens get standing to challenge illegal ordinances without waiting for state enforcement
What they're saying: The Sportsmen's Alliance is pushing members to contact committee members supporting the bill.
- "There has never been a more crucial time" to be engaged in protecting gun rights, according to the organization's action alert
- Supporters frame it as leveling the playing field between individual citizens and municipal governments
- Opposition arguments haven't emerged publicly yet, but expect pushback from municipal leagues
What's next: The House companion bill is expected to follow if SB 278 advances through the Senate.
- Committee members need to hear from constituents before Tuesday's hearing
- Similar measures in other states suggest this could become a template for nationwide preemption enforcement
- The bill would need Governor DeWine's signature, who has generally supported gun rights measures
The bottom line: Ohio could become the latest state to put real teeth behind firearm preemption, making local gun bans financially dangerous for municipalities.
Go deeper:
- Sportsmen's Alliance action alert on SB 278
- Congressional Sportsmen's Foundation on preemption
- Giffords analysis of Florida's preemption penalties
Read the original article in The Handbook | By Steve Duskett
Join the Discussion
If SB 278 passes, do you think the threat of lawsuits will actually stop cities from trying to push gun restrictions, or will they just find creative workarounds?
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