The first bill signed will ban bump stocks and other devices that increase a gun's rate of fire."Do you remember the shooting where we had eight young people shot? Guess what was attached to that glock? One of these switches," said Adam Geer, Philadelphia's public safety director."When we have these devices floating around Philadelphia, called switch devices, which can turn a handgun into a machine gun, there is no time to rest," said Mayor Parker.
"When we talk about a safer Philly, we want the public to know that traffic is part of that," said Mayor Parker. The city is taking lessons learned from the speed cameras along Roosevelt Boulevard and putting them to use on Broad Street. Officials said at least 50 lives have been saved in the years since cameras were installed on the Boulevard, and moving violations dropped by 95%. Bidding is already underway on the cameras and they will be paid for with parking fines.
The third bill signed will create a licensing process for officers to evict someone in Philadelphia. The requirements include nearly 200 hours of training.1 hour ago