Applications to purchase and carry handguns have risen dramatically this year in Minnesota's most populous counties, putting them on track to blow past permit revenues collected in recent years.
Hennepin and Ramsey counties already have exceeded what they had brought in by this time last year — even what they'd expected to bring in for all of 2013, officials said this week. Anoka County could potentially double the amount it took in last year. Dakota County, in the south metro, and St. Louis County, in northern Minnesota, are also well on pace to surpass last year's total.
"These numbers reflect the unprecedented surge in permit demand since the Sandy Hook [school shooting] incident and are reflective of the panic buying that took place at the time," said Anoka County Sheriff's Commander Paul Sommer. "The numbers are slowing down, but we are still seeing about double the number of requests each month that we saw in 2012."
As of last week, Hennepin County had raked in $427,000 from permit applications so far this year. That's already well beyond the $355,000 the county had expected in permit revenue for all of 2013. And this year's revenues are well on track to surpass the $537,615 raised in 2012 and the $334,325 in 2011.
It's unclear whether that increased volume will continue and produce record receipts, however. May's collections dipped from the $90,000 average over the first four months to just $71,000, said county Budget Director Dave Lawless. "We don't really have a good sense of where the trend is going," he added.
Revenue not a windfall
Ramsey County revenues already have exceeded the annual projection of $120,000, according to sheriff's spokesman Randy Gustafson.
So far Ramsey County has brought in about $196,000 in permit fees, compared to last year's total of $188,665, which itself was an increase over the $125,950 collected in 2011, Gustafson said.
But higher revenues do not constitute a windfall. State law does not allow money raised from permit applications to be used for anything but related administrative costs, such as background checks.