One of the most disappointing policy failures this year has been the inability of the U.S. Congress to approve meaningful gun control legislation. Even after multiple mass shootings, including the horrific murders of elementary schoolchildren in Connecticut last December, lawmakers failed to deliver stronger background checks.
Now Congress is facing a Dec. 9 deadline to extend a ban on plastic guns that can evade metal detectors. The ban will expire unless lawmakers vote to strengthen it or continue it as currently written.
This sensible gun control action should be a no-brainer. At the very least, the law should be renewed, as it has been in two previous bipartisan votes. As many law-enforcement officials recommend, Congress should amend the regulations to address 3-D printed guns.
Under the current law, manufacturers of 3-D guns are only required to make their firearms detectable in screening in some way. To comply, many simply include a nonfunctional piece of metal that can be easily removed.
Though the threat is growing, law-enforcement officials who support extending and strengthening the law are concerned that gun control politics could get in the way of reauthorizing the act. With less than a week to make it happen between holiday recesses, it appears the extension has stalled as lawmakers debate whether to amend it to include restrictions specifically aimed at 3-D printed weapons.
As Dan Gross, president of the Brady Campaign to Prevent Gun Violence, put it: "We're on the clock, and as we know, this Congress doesn't deal well with deadlines."
The Undetectable Firearms Act was signed into law by President Ronald Reagan in 1988 and was renewed in 1998 and again in 2003. Because plastic guns can easily slip past detection at airports and other safety checkpoints, the law bans firearms that can pass unnoticed through metal detectors.
When the law initially passed, sneaking undetectable plastic guns onto planes and into government buildings only happened in the movies. Today, 3-D printing technology is advanced and available enough to cheaply create functional plastic handguns.