PA Drops VA. . . Adds ID and AL. Will Now Only Honor Resident Permits!!!!!!

Gary Slider

New member
The Pennsylvania Attorney General has made some major changes to Pennsylvania Reciprocity and most of it for the worse. The only good part is they will now honor the Idaho Enhanced and the Alabama Permits. The bad parts are they are going to stop honoring Virginia May 17, 2018. The only reason the date is one month away is the signed agreement they have with Virginia states they must give them a month if they wish to stop the agreement.

They have also signed new agreements with the all the states they already had signed agreements with and they all state now that they will only honor that states RESIDENT Permits!

PA had already resigned with VA, FL, UT, and a couple other states a few years ago and that wording only allowed for Resident permits from those states. Now they are totally only honoring Resident permits from the states they honor. This has the most effect on residents of Maryland, New Jersey and New York who live near the border with PA. Previously they could still get a New Hampshire or Texas Non-Resident Permit and carry in Pa with that permit. No Longer! Most can’t apply for a PA Non-Resident permit as PA statutes state to apply for a PA Non-Resident you have to have a permit from your home state. Those 3 states don’t issue to us common folk!!!!! You can read their new Reciprocity wording as put out by their AG and see all the new Agreements at the link Below. https://www.attorneygeneral.gov/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/Reciprocity-Summary.pdf

I have been working all evening making all the changes to www.handgunlaw.us updating all the pages that this PA changed caused.
 
To add to the difficulty, a few years ago Pennsylvania changed it's regulations so that now even out-of-staters applying for a non-resident license to carry firearms (LTCF - PA doesn't call it a "permit") must appear in person so the issuing office can take their photograph and "capture" their signature digitally to include on the license. Issue is through county sheriffs (except in Philadelphia), and each sheriff has his/her own policies. Some won't issue to non-residents. Others will accept a mailed application, but you still have to show up in person to have your photo taken and sign before they'll actually issue the license.

If you want to apply for a non-resident permit, be sure to call ahead. You might save a wasted trip.
 
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