Complete Colorado

New state licensing law drops the hammer on Colorado gun dealers

DENVER—A new Colorado law subjecting gun dealers already regulated by the federal government to onerous state licensing and regulatory burdens is more about a hostile legislature stifling gun rights than anything else, according to some in the firearms industry.

House Bill 24-1353, Firearms Dealers Requirements and Permit, requires federally licensed firearms dealers (FFLs) also obtain a $400 state permit issued by the Colorado Department of Revenue (DOR) that must be renewed every three years. Employees must complete an annual training course on gun safety and storage and get fingerprinted for a criminal background check.

DOR agents can conduct random on-site inspections at any point to ensure the law is being followed.

Governor Jared Polis signed the bill in June of 2024 and the law went fully into effect on July 1 of this year.

The law’s permitting mandates had to be completed by July 8, while the fingerprinting element was only in place as of July 1, giving gun dealers trying to comply a scant four business days due to the Fourth of July holiday weekend.

Sean Steele, director of the Colorado Federal Firearms Licensee Association, says this is part of a larger scheme to regulate the gun industry out of existence.

“The bill is but a small part of the overall agenda,” Steele told Complete Colorado, “Gun dealers, the firearms industry at large is one of the most heavily regulated industries in America.”

Ryan Resch, owner of Littleton gun store Bighorn Firearms, says the law has been more of an annoyance for his business.

“As of now it’s just more of a nuisance than anything,” Resch told Complete Colorado, “I do believe it is just made to make the gun industry less attractive to people that are considering entering it.”

Aside from random inspections, Bighorn Firearms, along with the other armories in the state, are required to keep trigger locks on behind-the-counter guns, and they must keep duplicate records for state access.

Resch says that out of the 2,000 or more FFls in Colorado, only about 800 have applied for the new permit.

“The state coming in and enforcing these regulations upon us doesn’t do anything that isn’t already being done,” Resch said referring to current Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, Firearms and Explosives (ATF) requirements he already has to comply with

At least two different gun dealers, Foundation Firearms in Loveland and Hammer Down Firearms in Wheat Ridge, claim to have closed their doors permanently due to HB-1353.

While Foundation had a quiet closure, Hammer Down openly stated that they shut down because of “the tyrannical and unconstitutional actions” of the Democrat-dominated Colorado legislature.

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