HR-9205-119
Sponsor introductory remarks on measure. (CR H4134)
Sponsored by Suhas Subramanyam (D-VA)
What it does
This bill would expand the federal Gun Free School Zones Act (GFSZA) by broadening the statutory definition of "school" to include early childhood education programs and preschools, as those terms are defined in the Higher Education Act of 1965. Under current law, the GFSZA prohibits knowingly possessing a firearm within 1,000 feet of a K-12 school zone. This bill would extend that same prohibition to the areas surrounding licensed preschools and early childhood education facilities.
Who benefits
Children enrolled in preschools and early childhood education programs, who would gain the same statutory firearm proximity protections currently afforded to K-12 students. Parents and guardians of preschool-age children. Staff and teachers at preschool and early childhood education facilities. Communities where these facilities are located. Law enforcement agencies, who would gain a clearer federal legal basis for prosecuting firearms violations near these facilities.
Who is hurt
Licensed firearms carriers — including concealed carry permit holders — who currently may legally possess firearms within 1,000 feet of a preschool or early childhood program would lose that ability in those zones (subject to existing GFSZA exemptions). Residents who live within 1,000 feet of a preschool and keep firearms at home may be affected depending on how the zone boundaries are drawn. Small firearms retailers located near preschools could face new legal exposure. Individuals unaware of a nearby facility's new protected status could face federal criminal liability.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that the current law creates an arbitrary gap in protection: a child in kindergarten is covered by federal gun-free zone rules, but the same child one year earlier in preschool is not. They contend that mass shooting data and incident reports show early childhood facilities face real security risks, and that there is no principled reason to exclude them from the same baseline federal protections afforded to K-12 schools. Extending the GFSZA to cover these settings, they argue, closes a logical inconsistency in existing law and provides a uniform federal floor of protection for all young children in educational settings.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that the Gun Free School Zones Act has already faced serious constitutional scrutiny — the Supreme Court struck down the original GFSZA in United States v. Lopez (1995) before Congress amended it — and that expanding the law's reach increases its legal exposure under the post-Bruen text-history-tradition framework. They contend that the 1,000-foot zone, when applied to densely located preschools and childcare centers, could effectively blanket entire urban neighborhoods, burdening the Second Amendment rights of law-abiding residents and permit holders with no demonstrated reduction in gun violence, since criminals are unlikely to be deterred by zone designations.
Constitutional context
The original Gun Free School Zones Act was struck down in United States v. Lopez (1995) under the Commerce Clause; Congress subsequently amended it to require a nexus to interstate commerce. Under New York State Rifle & Pistol Ass'n v. Bruen (2022), firearms regulations must also be consistent with the historical tradition of firearms regulation, and the constitutionality of gun-free zone designations — particularly their geographic scope — is an area of active post-Bruen litigation.
Checks and balances
Congress would expand the scope of a federal criminal prohibition; the Executive Branch (DOJ/ATF) would enforce it; federal courts would review prosecutions and any constitutional challenges, particularly under the Commerce Clause and the Second Amendment's Bruen framework.
Historical precedent
The original Gun Free School Zones Act (1990) was struck down in United States v. Lopez (1995) and subsequently re-enacted with an interstate commerce nexus requirement; this bill follows the same structural approach while expanding the covered facility types.