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Experts applaud Obama’s sweeping gun-control plan

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“So even if I knew this person had severe mental deficiencies and I don’t want to issue them a firearms license because I feel it’s unsafe, I still have to by statute. So having the ability to say, ‘No,’ ” Cunningham said, would make the community safer.

Larry Amerson, president of the National Sheriff’s Association, said Obama’s call to expand mental health services would also help. Sheriff of Calhoun County, Ala., Amerson said that four of the five people his department has shot and killed during his tenure had long-term mental problems. But Alabama’s state mental health services budget has been cut 36 percent, from $100 million in 2009 to $64.2 million in 2012.

“We’ve got to improve in that area, but without the support and encouragement of the federal government, that’s hard to do,” he said.

Mike Fitzpatrick, executive director of the National Alliance on Mental Illness, cheered Obama’s plan to enact the final regulations on a federal law that requires group health plans to provide coverage for mental health services at the same level as general medical and surgical benefits. But he expressed caution about Obama’s call to have mental health counselors provide police with information on potentially dangerous patients.

“On a given day, well over half of the people in this country with a diagnosable mental health problem don’t get treatment,” Fitzpatrick said. “And a lot of that has to do with the stigma surrounding mental illness. So we don’t want to create gun laws that block people from taking that first step to get evaluated and treated.”

Some people worry that Obama’s proposal to fund more police officers for schools could result in more student arrests for nonviolent offenses.

“Should the White House pursue this approach of placing more police in schools, there must be specific restrictions on how resources are allocated to ensure there are not unintended consequences for the youth we are really trying to protect,” said Judith Browne Dianis, co-director of the Advancement Project, a national civil rights organization.

The National Rifle Association, which has fought almost all gun-control measures, said Obama’s plans put too much emphasis on targeting gun owners and not enough on protecting children in schools.

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