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In NE Ohio, we make an appointment, go to the Sheriff's Dept, pay the fee, fill out the paper work, sit for a photo and get handed our CHL before we leave.

Total time with the Deputy, 20 minutes?

Kevin

Ditto with Union County, OH Sheriff office...easy peasy...

Considering how hard it was for me to obtain my original CT "non-resident" permit, I was also surprised at how easy it was to recently renew. They sent a notification in the mail asking for a new photo and $75. Permit (5 years) returned in less than 2 weeks.
 
To start thee process here you just walk into the sheriff's office lobby. All the forms are right by the window. Fill one out and give them your DL when they take the form, they will photo copy it and tell you thee will call you when it is ready. You don't even have to take off your gun to go in the sheriffs office or courthouse here.

It will be 2 days total from when I went in to when I have new permit in hand
 
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Medina County Ohio. Took about 10 minutes to renew my permit. She said it should be in the mail this week. She also said they are having a meeting and trying to streamline the process. It sounds like new permits are down but, people are still renewing. I'm keeping mine.
 
CWP is supposed to be free here now, as part of new law allowing open carry.

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Here they are called concealed weapon permits. I know some places call them concealed carry permits. Not here. I do not need any permit to carry in Montana, but with it I only have to fill out the 4473, the dealer writes down my permit # and out the door I go with my gun. No phone call needed. Plus, some states that require a permit honor a Montana permit.

Kind of like guns, better to have one and not need it, than need one and not have it.
 
Instant service

I went in yesterday and applied to renew my concealed weapons permit. The sheriff called this morning. I am going in to morrow at 10 am to pick it up. $25 for 4 more years

What would you expect in a town that has no crime, no congestion, no traffic jams, and just 78 people? :D
 
What would you expect in a town that has no crime, no congestion, no traffic jams, and just 78 people? :D

Hey we got 6000 people here. I don't mind going to the sheriffs office anyway, 2 of the deputies are kinda cute.

As for asking permission, I do not need a permit to carry here, I can go in the courthouses, the sheriff office on the college campus in a bar with no permit. I get the constitutional carry thing, and believe I should not need permission to exercise my rights. But try walking around with a M60 or building a nuke in your garage and see what happens. The constitution says nothing about be able to infringing the rights of convicted felons once they did their time.

But for that mater try moving your personal property (car) down a public right away you helped pay for without a permit for the car and to drive it.
 
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Hey we got 6000 people here. I don't mind going to the sheriffs office anyway, 2 of the deputies are kinda cute.

As for asking permission, I do not need a permit to carry here, I can go in the courthouses, the sheriff office on the college campus in a bar with no permit. I get the constitutional carry thing, and believe I should not need permission to exercise my rights. But try walking around with a M60 or building a nuke in your garage and see what happens. The constitution says nothing about be able to infringing the rights of convicted felons once they did their time.

But for that mater try moving your personal property (car) down a public right away you helped pay for without a permit for the car and to drive it.

The fantasies of some folks notwithstanding, we don't live in a libertarian Disneyland. Courts have ruled repeatedly that no Constitutional right is absolute and unlimited. In fact, in the Heller decision, it was Justice Scalia himself who wrote that "the right secured by the Second Amendment is not unlimited." I'm willing to accept that he knew what he was talking about.

(Now...having said that: I am not endorsing requiring permits in order for citizens to be able to defend themselves. I'm simply pointing out that states have the right to enact reasonable restrictions on what we think of as our freedoms. What constitutes "reasonable"? Well...that's why we have courts...)
 
In a country with 74 genders, I've seen nothing suggesting I need a permit for a simple lead relocation tool.
 
Here in Washoe County it can take you three months to get into the Sheriff's Office and another four months for them to issue the permit (the maximum allowed by law down to the day). There is absolutely no justification for the delay. It is a deliberate middle finger to the public. In neighboring counties the wait is measured in days.
Either way you got someone's permitsion. The 2A is quite clear, no legislators needed to do anything.

I give props to Vermont, the true CC state.
That's a great idea until you travel. When they went to Constitutional Carry in AZ all those people lost their ability to carry in neighboring NV and many other states. No permit means no permit reciprocity. Utah handled it better. When they went to Constitutional Carry they continued offering CCW permits so that their citizens could continue to carry around the country.
 
Here in Washoe County it can take you three months to get into the Sheriff's Office and another four months for them to issue the permit (the maximum allowed by law down to the day). There is absolutely no justification for the delay. It is a deliberate middle finger to the public. In neighboring counties the wait is measured in days.

That's a great idea until you travel. When they went to Constitutional Carry in AZ all those people lost their ability to carry in neighboring NV and many other states. No permit means no permit reciprocity. Utah handled it better. When they went to Constitutional Carry they continued offering CCW permits so that their citizens could continue to carry around the country.

That could be remedied with adhering to the Constitution.

I'm just a dreamer.
 
. When they went to Constitutional Carry in AZ all those people lost their ability to carry in neighboring NV and many other states. No permit means no permit reciprocity. Utah handled it better. When they went to Constitutional Carry they continued offering CCW permits so that their citizens could continue to carry around the country.
I didn't know that. Arizona stopped offering CHL/CCW permits entirely? Even if you want one for reciprocity purposes?

If so, seems kind of short sighted.

Also, my assumption is that in the constitutional carry states, the right to constitutional carry applies only to residents of that state. I.e., a non resident of the state while visiting or passing through would not have the right.

Is that correct?
 
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