Also just to clear something up, the NICS/4473 system can not (by current law) be used for any type of national gun registration.
This new bill would change all that... except the token restriction of the database being populated not actually being called a 'registry'.
The explanations I've seen for this 'cached' data is that it will somehow make the process more efficient.
This is also the reason given for why they want to keep all the previous failed checks (including personal information) in the system as well, even though 99.999% are due to administrative and clerical errors.
Once this data is there, a single change to a single law could require that the personal information on the 4473's be entered and you now have a fully populated, mandatory system of registration.
As for the costs... it's the same NICs system that is currently crumbling under the load today. You will have to travel to an FFL and fill out a 4473 to do this check, and there is no provision for it to be free, anymore than it currently is.
The increased costs will be expanding the number of operators at the call center to meet the millions of new checks every year. Larger systems to support the processing increases. More storage to support the increase in data. More managers to supervise the workers. More buildings to house the new workers. More salaries. More benefits.
You get the picture.
Or you can leave it the same, and wait a day, a week or 6 months (like the NFA branch)for the approval to come back.
All to add background checks to a process that is only a problem in Mayor Bloomberg's (the inventor of the 'gun show loophole') imagination.
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