CLINTON TO KEEP GUN BUYBACK PROGRAM DESPITE GOP OBJECTIONS

CHAPPAQUA, N.Y. (AP) _ President Clinton intends to
continue offering federal money to local governments for
gun buyback programs, despite a challenge from House
Republicans who claim the administration lacks legal
authority. Clinton plans to issue a statement Sunday
that pledges continued administration support for gun
the federally subsidized buyback programs, White House
spokeswoman Jennifer Palmieri said. She did not have
details of the statement Saturday, but the White House
plans to answer congressional critics of the $15 million
Buyback America program. After an overnight visit to his
new home north of New York City, Clinton is due to travel
to Chicago on Sunday. He is scheduled to address a
fund-raising luncheon and the annual meeting of the
Association of Trial Lawyers. Programs in at least 30
cities have been put on hold because of the dispute
between the Department of Housing and Urban Development
and the Republican chairman of the House appropriations
subcommittee that oversees HUD. Rep. James T. Walsh, R-N.Y,
said existing law did not authorize such spending. His
position is supported by the General Accounting Office,
the investigative arm of Congress. The program pays local
police and public housing administrators in 70 cities who
in turn pay $50 apiece for guns turned in by private
owners. The program is almost no-questions-asked, and is
intended to get guns off the streets in dangerous
neighborhoods. So far, the 10-month-old program has paid
out $3.5 million to buy back more than 17,000 guns. Most
of the weapons were destroyed. The National Rifle
Association and gun control opponents in Congress attacked
the program as wasteful and potentially dangerous, since
it could put cash into criminals" pockets. Clinton
maintains that HUD has clear legal authority to finance
the program, which he contends will help prevent "an
untold number of gun accidents, suicides and crimes,"
The New York Times reported in Sunday editions. "Despite
HUD"s clear authority to carry out this important program,
the gun lobby and other opponents of common-sense gun
safety measures continue to challenge this initiative,"
the Times quoted Clinton"s forthcoming statement as
saying. Walsh told the newspaper that if the buyback
program continued, housing officials could be fined or
even jailed. But he said he may not seek such penalties.


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