A display of guns for sale.

PHOENIX — State lawmakers are pushing ahead with a plan to make guns slightly more affordable, with one lobbyist suggesting some people have to choose between buying groceries or a gun.

On a 6-4 vote Tuesday, with only Republicans in favor, the Senate Appropriations Committee agreed to exempt the sales of firearms, ammunition and “firearm safety equipment’’ from state and local sales taxes.

Dave Kopp, lobbyist for the Arizona Citizens Defense League, testified that the goal of House Bill 2166 is consistent with a list of other exemptions from sales taxes for health and safety products.

“We firmly believe that guns are among those,’’ he said.

That didn’t wash with Sen. Sean Bowie, D-Phoenix.

He pointed out, for example, that the state taxes feminine hygiene products. It also taxes child safety seats, which parents are legally required to obtain for their vehicles.

Kopp responded that he would support exempting those products, too.

Bowie said the other reason lawmakers provide tax breaks is for economic development purposes, such as attracting more jobs and investment.

“For me, it seems the firearms industry is doing pretty well right now,’’ he said.

Kopp did not dispute that, but said, “I do believe that this is not geared toward helping the firearms industry per se, but helping the firearms industry customers.”

Bowie questioned whether there are people choosing not to purchase firearms because of the state’s 5.6% sales tax and the various local taxes.

“I doubt it,’’ Kopp conceded. “But if it becomes a situation where you need to buy a gun or you need to buy groceries, that sales tax could make all the difference.’’

That theme was echoed by Cheryl Todd. She is the Arizona coordinator for the DC Project, an organization of women that advocates for gun rights.

“As the person who is called on to balance my family’s budget and stretch my family’s dollars as far as possible, a bill like this will go a long way in not just my family but especially in lower-income families and those hit hardest by our ever-shrinking purchasing power that inflation is having on our dollars,’’ she said.

The proposed legislation, which now goes to the full Senate, is not the same as the version Rep. Steve Kaiser, R-Phoenix, shepherded through the House.

That version sought to create an absolute carve-out from sales taxes for all firearms. But Kaiser said some Republican senators said they would support an exemption only for the sale of used guns and equipment sold in retail stores.

The exemption for safety equipment includes devices that when installed on a gun prevent it from firing without first being deactivated. It also would cover new electronic interlocks that allow the weapon to be fired only by someone who is authorized to operate it.

There also would be no sales tax on gun safes and other lock boxes designed to allow access only through things like a key, a combination lock or a thumb print.


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Howard Fischer is a veteran journalist who has been reporting since 1970 and covering state politics and the Legislature since 1982. Follow him on Twitter at “@azcapmedia” or email azcapmedia@gmail.com.