H7553 - Carry Permit Denial Appeal Rights (2026)

Bill Details

Chamber: House

Introduced: February 6, 2026

Committee: House Judiciary

Status: Held for Further Study

Pro Gun Rights

Bill Summary

H7553 creates a formal appeal process for denied carry permit applications, requiring written reasons for denial, an in-person hearing, Superior Court review, and attorney fees for applicants who prevail against bad-faith denials.

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Bill History

04/08/2026Committee recommended measure be held for further study
04/01/2026Scheduled for hearing and/or consideration (04/08/2026)
02/06/2026Introduced, referred to House Judiciary

Sponsors

matthew_dawson
DemocratF

House District 65

david_place
RepublicanA

House District 47

jon_brien
IndependentA

House District 49

stephen_casey
DemocratA

House District 50

robert_phillips
arthur_corvese
thomas_noret
DemocratA

House District 25

earl_read
michael_chippendale
david_bennett
DemocratD

House District 20

Bill Analysis

H7553 creates a formal, enforceable appeal process for Rhode Islanders whose carry permit applications are denied – giving applicants the right to an in-person hearing, written reasons for denial, Superior Court review, and attorney fees if the denial had no good faith basis.

The Key Change

The bill creates a new § 11-47-8.2 establishing a two-step appeal process for denied carry permits. First, an applicant may submit a written reconsideration request within 15 days of a denial. The licensing authority or AG’s office must then hold an in-person meeting within 14 days, allow the applicant to submit additional documentation and bring an attorney, and issue a written decision within 7 days of the meeting – with specific written reasons if still denied. Second, the applicant may appeal to Superior Court within 15 days of any denial, where they are entitled to a trial de novo before a judge. All proceedings are confidential by default. If the Superior Court finds the denial had no good faith basis, the court shall award the applicant reasonable attorney fees and costs.

What It Means for Gun Owners

Rhode Island’s current carry permit system gives licensing authorities broad discretion and little accountability. H7553 changes that: denials must be explained in writing, applicants get a real hearing with an attorney, and a Superior Court judge can overturn an arbitrary denial. The attorney fee provision is particularly strong – it creates a financial consequence for bad-faith denials. This is a meaningful due process protection for every Rhode Islander who applies for a carry permit.

Email and Petition

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