SANTA FE, N.M. ā A Republican New Mexico legislator wants movie actors and other film-set professionals to undergo state-sponsored gun-safety training after a cinematographer was fatally shot last year by Alec Baldwin with a weapon he says he thought was not loaded with live ammunition.
State Sen. Cliff Pirtle of Roswell on Monday introduced a bill that would require all acting and film production personnel where firearms are present to complete a safety course offered by the New Mexico Game and Fish Department that is designed primarily for hunters.
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Production companies that don't comply would risk their eligibility for state film tax rebates. New Mexico offers a rebate of between 25% and 35% of in-state spending for video production that helps filmmakers large and small underwrite their work.
It was unclear whether the Democrat-led Legislature will bring the bill up for debate and a possible vote during a 30-day legislative session that ends Feb. 17. Democratic Gov. Michelle Lujan Grisham had not yet read the bill Monday and declined to say whether she supports the initiative, according to an email from spokeswoman Nora Meyers Sackett.
Pirtle is a partner in a farming business and an ardent supporter of gun rights. He has handled firearms on film sets while acting in minor roles for Western movies, such as āDeadman Standingā in 2018 and āDeath Alleyā in 2021.
The senator said in a statement that he was heartbroken to learn of the death of Halyna Hutchins in October 2021 on the set of āRust."
āUnfortunately, to the Hollywood elite, the talk around guns is all too abstract,ā Pirtle said. āThis is a simple bill to bring some gravity back to the use of firearms on film sets.ā
Baldwin has said he didnāt know the gun he was holding contained a live round when it went off while pointed at Hutchins.
The Santa Fe County Sheriffās Office that is leading an investigation into the cause of the death has said it is too soon to determine whether charges will be filed.
Investigators have described āsome complacencyā in how weapons were handled on set at a movie-set ranch near Santa Fe, as they trace the source of ammunition from the set including live and dummy rounds.
Pirtle says his 10-year-old son has undergone standard firearms training by the state Game and Fish Department to instill an understanding that guns are not only household tools but also can be deadly.
Sackett said workplace safety regulators at the Environment Department have been investigating the death on the āRustā set and are researching film-industry standards for the safe handling of firearms.
New Mexico enforces general workplace safety requirements on film sets and defers in some instances to gun-safety standards that are developed by the film industry.