ATLANTA — Georgia lawmakers on Tuesday gave final passage to a bill that aims to void a city of Savannah ordinance that imposes fines and possible jail time for leaving guns in unlocked cars.
The state Senate gave final approval to the measure, which says cities and counties can't regulate how guns are stored. It also lets gun owners sue local governments who impose any such rules in violation of state law, collecting at least $25,000 in damages if they win.
Senate Bill 204 now goes to Gov. Brian Kemp's desk for his signature or veto.
Mayor Van Johnson and Savannah's city council voted unanimously in 2024 to outlaw keeping firearms in unlocked vehicles, with maximum penalties of a $1,000 fine and 30 days in jail. They said the law would make it harder for criminals to steal guns in a state where lawmakers have widely abolished restrictions on owning and carrying firearms.
But the rules have left gun rights advocates fuming, saying that the city is in effect punishing gun owners who had their guns stolen.
''Ultimately what Savannah was doing was regulating citizens' right to have a gun in their car,'' former state Sen. Colton Moore, a Republican from Trenton, told The Associated Press. ''Their car was getting broken into, and they were going from a victim of a crime now to being a criminal. And that's what we don't want to happen going forward.''
Moore resigned from the Senate Tuesday after the bill passed because he filed to run for the congressional seat left vacant by U.S. Rep. Marjorie Taylor Greene's resignation.
Johnson said Tuesday that if Kemp signs the bill into law, the city will stop issuing citations.