DES MOINES, Iowa — “We don’t need a militia of toddlers.”
Those were the words of Iowa State Representative Kirsten Running-Marquardt, on the floor of the legislature in Des Moines last week.
She was responding to proposed changes to state gun laws that currently restrict children under the age of 14 from using handguns.
The reaction to the changes — which would allow children of all ages to handle deadly weapons with adult supervision — was intense and immediate, as Iowa entered the national debate over gun control last week, with supporters championing the new law as a common-sense measure that would encourage safe handling of firearms.
“This is not about giving our children the combo to the gun safe,” said Brian Hood, head coach of the Central Iowa Scholastic Shooters, a youth sport-shooting league. “This is about allowing them in a supervised scenario, to learn a great sport.”
Hood’s 16-year-old daughter Grace, who is an active sport shooter, agrees: “I think that as long as the person is responsible enough, and knows how to respect the firearm – and as long as they have someone around them — then I think it will be fine.”
But detractors see the proposed changes as an example of overreach on the part of the gun lobby.
“Almost every unintentional shooting of a child — almost every, every suicide of a child or teen happens with a parent’s gun,” said Dan Gross, president of the Brady Campaign Against Gun Violence, a gun-control advocacy group. “It’s not some hypothetical fear. It’s something that happens every day across this country. Every day across America, nine children are shot unintentionally just by accident. Every year 900 children and teens take their own lives.
“They’re almost all with a parent’s gun.”
Iowa is one of the few states that has such specific legislation prohibiting children from using handguns. Restrictions on where and when firearms can be used — and by whom — vary widely from state to state, and even at the municipal level.
Meanwhile, federal law states that “a person under the age of 18 may not possess a handgun or handgun-only ammunition,” but certain exceptions are granted with the “written permission of a parent.”
Gun control laws like Iowa’s statute forbidding children under 14 to use handguns “actually grew out of a 1960s view that the broader hazard was from handguns, and from youths with guns engaged in criminal activity,” according to Nicholas Johnson, a law professor at Fordham University who researches the second amendment.
According to a detailed investigation into children and guns by the New York Times, “fewer than 20 states have enacted laws to hold adults criminally liable if they fail to store guns safely, enabling children to access them.”
The issue of access is one that even young gun enthusiasts understand.









